The tires on the bigger wheels have more traction (hence the lower efficiency) and the difference in range probably isn't as large as the EPA numbers suggest (rolling resistance is a smaller percentage of highway vs. city range)I finally found those on the Lucid website, doing different build configurations. 3rd row seats cost 13 miles (~3%), larger wheels cost 43 miles (~10%), while both combined cost 64 miles (14%).
One of the biggest reasons I'm willing to pay $100k+ for a Gravity is to get mega range in a vehicle of this size/form/luxury. We road trip a lot (7-8 trips/year averaging 2000 miles each). It's usually just 2 of us so we don't need the 3rd row (but all the extra storage space will be great!). Sacrificing significant range for a bigger wheel seems crazy to me. I never found the look of bigger wheels to be much improvement anyway. In fact I'd rather have smaller wheels. More sidewall usually mean a softer ride.
I want as much of that 450 as I can get. Hoping for a realistic 400 at highway speeds (280 from 10-80%). We've done a ton of road trips stopping every 100-150 miles to charge, which is doable, but 400+ means we can do a full day in almost the same time as an ICE drive (750 miles in just 2 refueling stops).
The third row range hit is just because the EPA calculation rounds the car weight in 500lb increments so it's 6000lbs for the 2 row and 6500lbs for the 3 row.
Really hoping the Gravity hits 160mi in the Out of Spec 10% challenge (15 minute charge to get 160 miles of 80mph range).