stjara
Member
yup. hear that. did cut me off but no "coal". so I shot him.If he didn’t try to cut you off and blow black smoke in your face , he was being civil.
yup. hear that. did cut me off but no "coal". so I shot him.If he didn’t try to cut you off and blow black smoke in your face , he was being civil.
My point is that I have had GT loaners several times for extended periods. I have not noticed any difference in noise.. Certainly not enough to bother me... , I also have AWD Purethx D. Bunnylebowski pointed out that the motors were different, which I didn't know, so I assumed the mounting and such also were different so comparing them as equals seemed pointless as far as sound. They can't make my Touring as quiet as the GT since it's a different animal so to speak. And 61 db in the GT at 38-41 mph. Will check my touring next week when i get it back.
I had to double check that the Touring and GT had the same 0-60 time from the same magazine, but it's true. Here are details with links:According to car and driver and motortrend, Lucid Air Touring and Grand Touring have the same 0-60 of 3.0, and they tested the Pure AWD at 3.4. So they're very much underrated! The RWD is rated at 4.5 so that's significantly slower. Hopefully it's also underrated and maybe comes in at 4.1 or so when tested, but that's still going to be noticeably slower.
Car (with link to test article) | 0-60 | 0-100 | 0-130 |
2022 Lucid Air Dream Performance | 2.5 | 5.5 | |
2022 Lucid Air Grand Touring | 3.0 | 6.0 | 10.3 |
2023 Air Touring | 3.0 | 6.7 | 12.0 |
2024 Lucid Air Pure RWD | 4.3 | | |
2024 Lucid Air Pure AWD | 3.5 | | |
2024 Air Sapphire | 2.1 | 4.2 | 6.7 |
After posting I noticed that the GT is on 19" all-season tires and the Touring is on 20" summer tires (Lucid's configuration page calls these "summer tires").I had to double check that the Touring and GT had the same 0-60 time from the same magazine, but it's true. Here are details with links:
Car and Driver test results:
Car (with link to test article) 0-60 0-100 0-130 2022 Lucid Air Dream Performance 2.5 5.5 2022 Lucid Air Grand Touring 3.0 6.0 10.32023 Air Touring 3.0 6.7 12.02024 Lucid Air Pure RWD 4.3 2024 Lucid Air Pure AWD 3.5 2024 Air Sapphire 2.1 4.2 6.7
Im not really convinced that would make a difference. Look at the Model 3 performance. There have been multiple tests of both the 18" All Seasons and 20" Summer TIres (PS4S) and the 0-60 is identical at ~3.1After posting I noticed that the GT is on 19" all-season tires and the Touring is on 20" summer tires (Lucid's configuration page calls these "summer tires").
In truth, I've owned my GT since Nov 2022 and only engaged in full throttle accretion once. The car is actually way too fast for driving on public roads. I and my passengers find full accretion to be very unpleasant.I had to double check that the Touring and GT had the same 0-60 time from the same magazine, but it's true. Here are details with links:
Car and Driver test results:
Car (with link to test article) 0-60 0-100 0-130 2022 Lucid Air Dream Performance 2.5 5.5 2022 Lucid Air Grand Touring 3.0 6.0 10.32023 Air Touring 3.0 6.7 12.02024 Lucid Air Pure RWD 4.3 2024 Lucid Air Pure AWD 3.5 2024 Air Sapphire 2.1 4.2 6.7
I feel pretty much the opposite.In truth, I've owned my GT since Nov 2022 and only engaged in full throttle accretion once. The car is actually way too fast for driving on public roads. I and my passengers find full accretion to be very unpleasant.
I drive my AGT 50% of the time in Swift and 50% of the time in Sprint. The car is brutally fast and I love it. (With passengers in the car I drive just in Swift mode. Occasionally drive in Smooth mode part of the time on long trips to maximize range. Otherwise prefer the more aggressive modes.I feel pretty much the opposite.
Fast doesn’t have to mean unpleasant. Being able to tap the power when needed is really nice.In truth, I've owned my GT since Nov 2022 and only engaged in full throttle accretion once. The car is actually way too fast for driving on public roads. I and my passengers find full accretion to be very unpleasant.
I had to double check that the Touring and GT had the same 0-60 time from the same magazine, but it's true. Here are details with links:
Car and Driver test results:
Car (with link to test article) 0-60 0-100 0-130 2022 Lucid Air Dream Performance 2.5 5.5 2022 Lucid Air Grand Touring 3.0 6.0 10.32023 Air Touring 3.0 6.7 12.02024 Lucid Air Pure RWD 4.3 2024 Lucid Air Pure AWD 3.5 2024 Air Sapphire 2.1 4.2 6.7
I think heat pump being added since 2024 in GTsIs there any hardware etc. difference between 2023 and 2024 models (AGT and AT) ? Would they still perform the same ?
Huh so according to Car and Driver my ‘24 Touring will do 0-60 in 3.0 ?I think heat pump being added since 2024 in GTs
I opened the link to the C&D road test of the 2022 Air GT. “300 miles in 21 minutes” of DC fast charging my a$$. Just this morning I had to use the nearest operational EA station in my neigbhourhood (which put me within a quarter mile of Tijuana, BC Mexico. I was in San Ysidro). For some reason my Tesla HPWC did NOT start charging my car at midnight last night as I had scheduled it.
At the EA DCFC station I noted it took 31 minutes on a 350 kW stall to charge from 25% to 80%, adding 280-something miles. Hardly 300 miles in 21 minutes.
I’m just nitpicking.
If you start from closer to 0%, I bet you'll get those 300 miles....At the EA DCFC station I noted it took 31 minutes on a 350 kW stall to charge from 25% to 80%, adding 280-something miles. Hardly 300 miles in 21 minutes..
Just as a counterpoint, here’s my most recent EA charge:I opened the link to the C&D road test of the 2022 Air GT. “300 miles in 21 minutes” of DC fast charging my a$$. Just this morning I had to use the nearest operational EA station in my neigbhourhood (which put me within a quarter mile of Tijuana, BC Mexico. I was in San Ysidro). For some reason my Tesla HPWC did NOT start charging my car at midnight last night as I had scheduled it.
At the EA DCFC station I noted it took 31 minutes on a 350 kW stall to charge from 25% to 80%, adding 280-something miles. Hardly 300 miles in 21 minutes.
I’m just nitpicking.
Just as a counterpoint, here’s my most recent EA charge:
View attachment 21652
Starting SOC was 19%.
In 5 minutes, I was at 39%.
In 13 minutes, I had gained 46 kWh, and was at 56% SOC, still going strong at 158kW. So in 13 minutes I had gained 170-200 EPA miles, depending on which tires I throw on the car.
In 25 minutes, I was at 80% and had gained 75 kWh, or about 64% of my battery (some of which was obviously lost to heat and other things).
That means in 25 min I gained 275-317 EPA miles and that’s if we use the *actual* 61% gain, accounting for losses.
So yeah, I guess they were four minutes off, but I can pretty much guarantee that if my starting SOC were 10% and not 19% I might have even beat their 21 minutes.
It’s possible. This was at the Walmart in Mountain View just last week.
Very similar to my experience. 35-40 minutes, no matter what SoC I start at. And I've started as low as 6%.Hey, this is a thread about the motor whining... Not the owner!
At the risk of further hijacking this thread... In my seven months of ownership, and with nothing but EA charging, I find what I call the 'Rule of 35' to be almost comically consistent in my lowly Pure AWD. I almost always charge to 82%, which for some reason gets me out of the parking lot at 80%. Whether I'm at a 150 kW or a 350 kW charger, and whether I'm starting at a 25% SOC or 40% or anywhere in between, the 'time to charge' is 35 minutes. Almost every time! If charging starts at a high rate, it drops off fast. If charging starts at a low rate, it drops off slowly. Any way I slice or dice it, I'm there for 35 minutes. Go figure!
Just as a counterpoint, here’s my most recent EA charge:
View attachment 21652
Starting SOC was 19%.
In 5 minutes, I was at 39%.
In 13 minutes, I had gained 46 kWh, and was at 56% SOC, still going strong at 158kW. So in 13 minutes I had gained 170-200 EPA miles, depending on which tires I throw on the car.
In 25 minutes, I was at 80% and had gained 75 kWh, or about 64% of my battery (some of which was obviously lost to heat and other things).
That means in 25 min I gained 275-317 EPA miles and that’s if we use the *actual* 61% gain, accounting for losses.
So yeah, I guess they were four minutes off, but I can pretty much guarantee that if my starting SOC were 10% and not 19% I might have even beat their 21 minutes.
It’s possible. This was at the Walmart in Mountain View just last week.