Lucid Motors
#16
RL Community Team
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Rennlist Member
I agree. if I cannot touch it or see it I cannot commit to it. in a few years I may tire of the taycan and I'll give the lucid a chance to mature a bit. I had an early tesla and the car was very problematic
#17
Rennlist Member
The Lucid Air is geared to compete with MB S-Class. The Taycan is a sports sedan.,.. different target audience.
Having said that, I am yet to see a company compete with VAG (Porsche/Audi/Bentley/Lamborghini) in fit/finish/craftsmanship and materials used.
In the realm of Taycan again, I have been on the fence between a fully loaded 4S vs. Audi RS7 which is fair competition (non electric) and I like the RS7 rear seats better (family) and trunk (hatch) which is useable. Still undecided as the Taycan is definitely the future. I would not consider the Lucid or Tesla for that matter (Their fit and materials are way below their price). My 5c.
Having said that, I am yet to see a company compete with VAG (Porsche/Audi/Bentley/Lamborghini) in fit/finish/craftsmanship and materials used.
In the realm of Taycan again, I have been on the fence between a fully loaded 4S vs. Audi RS7 which is fair competition (non electric) and I like the RS7 rear seats better (family) and trunk (hatch) which is useable. Still undecided as the Taycan is definitely the future. I would not consider the Lucid or Tesla for that matter (Their fit and materials are way below their price). My 5c.
#18
RL Community Team
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I don't get the comparison to an MB S class or any other ICE vehicle. there is no comparing ICE vehicles to EVs. if you are comparing cabin amenities ok but otherwise they are two very different vehicles and someone who is looking at an EV is not looking at an MB S class and someone looking to buy an MB S class is not looking at taycans, teslas or the lucid car
#19
Racer
Who would’ve thought that precious metals, needed for building batteries, would be so dang precious? It’s that time of year again, when automakers trot out their Q3 balance sheets, but costs have spiked for 2022 — and small EV makers are hit the hardest. From Reuters:Every time Lucid Group Inc (LCID.O) or Rivian Automotive Inc (RIVN.O) sells an electric car, they are losing hundreds of thousands of dollars due to staggering raw material and production costs, their latest earnings statements showed.
Quarterly reports from electric vehicle (EV) makers from the past two weeks show them struggling to hit delivery targets and rapidly burning through cash.
Lucid’s cost of revenue surged to $492.5 million in the July-September quarter from $3.3 million a year earlier, and its losses widened as customers canceled orders fearing long wait times.
Canoo Inc (GOEV.O) said in May it had “substantial doubt” about remaining a going concern. At the end of September, it had $6.8 million in cash and equivalents, down sharply from $415 million a year earlier.
...
Rivian, backed by Amazon.com (AMZN.O) and Ford Motor (F.N), had $13.8 billion cash on hand at the end of September. It also has a contract to supply 100,000 electric delivery vans to Amazon. But its cost of goods sold was about $220,000 per car versus an average selling price of $81,000 in the quarter, CFRA estimated.
Quarterly reports from electric vehicle (EV) makers from the past two weeks show them struggling to hit delivery targets and rapidly burning through cash.
Lucid’s cost of revenue surged to $492.5 million in the July-September quarter from $3.3 million a year earlier, and its losses widened as customers canceled orders fearing long wait times.
Canoo Inc (GOEV.O) said in May it had “substantial doubt” about remaining a going concern. At the end of September, it had $6.8 million in cash and equivalents, down sharply from $415 million a year earlier.
...
Rivian, backed by Amazon.com (AMZN.O) and Ford Motor (F.N), had $13.8 billion cash on hand at the end of September. It also has a contract to supply 100,000 electric delivery vans to Amazon. But its cost of goods sold was about $220,000 per car versus an average selling price of $81,000 in the quarter, CFRA estimated.
#20
I don’t know why people are surprised starting a new car company is hard and the automotive business is generally a ****ty one to be in.
#21
Months ago, I was looking for a replacement for my Model S. I thought the exterior of the Lucid Air was odd looking (the different colored roof is just...UGH!) and the interior a bit cheesy...but the range was magnificent. I drove the car, and found it impressive enough to own. So I put down a deposit. Shortly after that, I discovered that the innocuously named Public Investment Fund owns a whopping SIXTY PERCENT of Lucid Motors. Public Investment Fund is the sovereign wealth fund of Saudi Arabia. The chairman is Mohammed bin Salman, the same Saudi royal who ordered the murder and dismemberment of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Mohammed bin Salman is also, of course, the leader of Saudi Arabia, one of the most oppressive regimes in the world. Between the Saudis' abuse of women, their persecution of religious minorities, and the fact they murder LGBT people (I am gay) there is no way in hell they're getting one red cent from me. If they were the only car company in the world, I'd choose to walk. I hope they fail.
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Christian J (11-18-2022)
#22
Rennlist Member
I follow Lucid as much as any other new entry EV to the market. The one qualifier for me is service. Arguably Porsche has struggled in this with the Taycan. If PAG can struggle, where does that leave the immature brands - just sayin?
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Dr. G7 (11-19-2022)
#23
#24
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Months ago, I was looking for a replacement for my Model S. I thought the exterior of the Lucid Air was odd looking (the different colored roof is just...UGH!) and the interior a bit cheesy...but the range was magnificent. I drove the car, and found it impressive enough to own. So I put down a deposit. Shortly after that, I discovered that the innocuously named Public Investment Fund owns a whopping SIXTY PERCENT of Lucid Motors. Public Investment Fund is the sovereign wealth fund of Saudi Arabia. The chairman is Mohammed bin Salman, the same Saudi royal who ordered the murder and dismemberment of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Mohammed bin Salman is also, of course, the leader of Saudi Arabia, one of the most oppressive regimes in the world. Between the Saudis' abuse of women, their persecution of religious minorities, and the fact they murder LGBT people (I am gay) there is no way in hell they're getting one red cent from me. If they were the only car company in the world, I'd choose to walk. I hope they fail.
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cyclrder (11-20-2022)
#25
It was not lost on me when I purchased my 2022 Taycan that, a mere 77 years ago, Ferdinand Porsche was a member of the **** party manufacturing tanks for the Axis powers and buddying up to Hitler. The difference, however, is that it is inconceivable that anyone in the leadership of Porsche would hold those views today, and they are certainly not participating in efforts to exterminate groups of people. If the House of Saud ever decides to join us here in the 21st Century and cease the oppression of women, religious minorities, and LGBT people, I'm happy to reconsider my position. Until then, I wish them nothing but ill will. I hope the company fails.
#26
It was not lost on me when I purchased my 2022 Taycan that, a mere 77 years ago, Ferdinand Porsche was a member of the **** party manufacturing tanks for the Axis powers and buddying up to Hitler. The difference, however, is that it is inconceivable that anyone in the leadership of Porsche would hold those views today, and they are certainly not participating in efforts to exterminate groups of people. If the House of Saud ever decides to join us here in the 21st Century and cease the oppression of women, religious minorities, and LGBT people, I'm happy to reconsider my position. Until then, I wish them nothing but ill will. I hope the company fails.
#28
It was not lost on me when I purchased my 2022 Taycan that, a mere 77 years ago, Ferdinand Porsche was a member of the **** party manufacturing tanks for the Axis powers and buddying up to Hitler. The difference, however, is that it is inconceivable that anyone in the leadership of Porsche would hold those views today, and they are certainly not participating in efforts to exterminate groups of people. If the House of Saud ever decides to join us here in the 21st Century and cease the oppression of women, religious minorities, and LGBT people, I'm happy to reconsider my position. Until then, I wish them nothing but ill will. I hope the company fails.
Virtually every product we buy has links to China, which is a regime that makes the Saudis look like amateurs when it comes to oppressing its own people. From organ harvesting, to the forced sterilization of Uighur muslims, to the daily brutalization of ordinary people who just want individual freedom, to disruption of democracy across the world, China is a far greater threat than the Saudis. I agree that we should not trade with the Saudis, but my point is that if you’re going to take that position, then you should look at what else we do in our lives to support tyrannical regimes.
Last edited by kort677; 11-29-2022 at 10:55 AM.
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thebishman (11-29-2022)