- Joined
- Mar 7, 2020
- Messages
- 6,633
- Reaction score
- 9,256
- Location
- Naples, FL
- Cars
- Model S Plaid, Odyssey
- Air DE Number
- 154
- Referral Code
- 033M4EXG
"Portie with Dawn" posts some fairly even-handed reviews about the Lucid Air and other EVs and is usually spot on with her observations. But she recently posted a bizarre review comparing the interiors of the Mercedes EQS, the Tesla Model S, and the Lucid Air. In the review, she claimed that, with the front seat pushed all the way back, the Model S has more rear legroom than the Lucid Air. She needs to track down who sold her that bad batch of dope.
Here is a comment I posted back to her:
I remained so perplexed by your observations -- particularly regarding rear legroom when pushing the front seats all the way back -- that I took a tape measure this morning to measure some distances in our Model S Plaid and Lucid Air Dream. With the front seat pushed all the way back, the bottom of the Model S front seat was 25" from the front firewall (measured 6" above the floor). The same measurement in the Lucid Air showed 27.5" to the firewall.
Then, with the front seats of both cars still pushed all the way back, I measured the distance from the rear bottom of the front seats (thus removing the variable of seat back recline angles) to the bottom of the rear seats in both cars. The Tesla was a smidge under 10"; the Air was 15". Thus, totaling the front and rear legroom in each car shows the Air has 7.5" more cumulative legroom than the Model S. That may not sound like much, but this is difference in legroom between a Mercedes S-Class and a Mercedes Maybach, and such a difference is considerable in terms of interior space in a car.
Put another way, with the front seats pushed all the way back in both cars, the front passenger in a Lucid Air has 2.5" more legroom length than in a Model S at the same that the rear passenger in a Lucid Air has 5" more legroom length than in a Model S. These differences are hugely consequential to differences in rear passenger comfort. They don't make much difference in front seat comfort, as the feet of a six-footer can't reach the firewall in either car with the seats pushed fully back.
However, it does mean that a Lucid front seat passenger can bring the seat further forward than in a Model S without being able to touch the firewall, thus further increasing the legroom available to rear seat passengers in a Lucid. With the driver's seats of both cars set to my programmed driving positions, my measurements showed a passenger behind me in the Air has over 9" more legroom than in the Tesla. This is why our friends ask that we bring the Lucid to pick them up.
Here is a comment I posted back to her:
I remained so perplexed by your observations -- particularly regarding rear legroom when pushing the front seats all the way back -- that I took a tape measure this morning to measure some distances in our Model S Plaid and Lucid Air Dream. With the front seat pushed all the way back, the bottom of the Model S front seat was 25" from the front firewall (measured 6" above the floor). The same measurement in the Lucid Air showed 27.5" to the firewall.
Then, with the front seats of both cars still pushed all the way back, I measured the distance from the rear bottom of the front seats (thus removing the variable of seat back recline angles) to the bottom of the rear seats in both cars. The Tesla was a smidge under 10"; the Air was 15". Thus, totaling the front and rear legroom in each car shows the Air has 7.5" more cumulative legroom than the Model S. That may not sound like much, but this is difference in legroom between a Mercedes S-Class and a Mercedes Maybach, and such a difference is considerable in terms of interior space in a car.
Put another way, with the front seats pushed all the way back in both cars, the front passenger in a Lucid Air has 2.5" more legroom length than in a Model S at the same that the rear passenger in a Lucid Air has 5" more legroom length than in a Model S. These differences are hugely consequential to differences in rear passenger comfort. They don't make much difference in front seat comfort, as the feet of a six-footer can't reach the firewall in either car with the seats pushed fully back.
However, it does mean that a Lucid front seat passenger can bring the seat further forward than in a Model S without being able to touch the firewall, thus further increasing the legroom available to rear seat passengers in a Lucid. With the driver's seats of both cars set to my programmed driving positions, my measurements showed a passenger behind me in the Air has over 9" more legroom than in the Tesla. This is why our friends ask that we bring the Lucid to pick them up.
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