Next-Gen Lucid Mid-size minimal parts? Autoline

Headline is misleading, this is what came out of a different article from Lucid.

Cost lower, expand bigger. Lucid insists the initial midsize model's bill of materials is on “an entirely different planet” relative to today – roughly half the cost of some U.S. rivals' segment-level Bill of Materials (BOM), with components lower in count than the new Tesla Model Y, the company asserts.

Components in lower count than Model Y, but other segment (ahem Ford, BMW). It will probably do the 6 mi/kwh and be able to do 350 miles EPA with a 60 kwhr pack.
 
Headline is misleading, this is what came out of a different article from Lucid.

Cost lower, expand bigger. Lucid insists the initial midsize model's bill of materials is on “an entirely different planet” relative to today – roughly half the cost of some U.S. rivals' segment-level Bill of Materials (BOM), with components lower in count than the new Tesla Model Y, the company asserts.

Components in lower count than Model Y, but other segment (ahem Ford, BMW). It will probably do the 6 mi/kwh and be able to do 350 miles EPA with a 60 kwhr pack.
If the next Lucid was launching at the end of this year instead of the end of 2026, I'd probably wait to see its specs, rather than purchase a Gravity now. I assume it will be a bit smaller, which would be my preference, but I worry that there won't be a long range config, and I do love that my Gravity stands a good chance of delivering more than 350 miles of real-world highway range. I want a car sooner than 2 years from now, so the wait is just too much.
 
The first Tesla Model S was very complicated to build
Tesla simplified the car (and cheapened it up) over the years
My Air is a very detailed luxury car
The higher volume mid sized car can't follow that approach
 
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