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Transportation The 2000 Beanies

Lucid Air Named MotorTrend Car of the Year (cnn.com) 143

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: The Lucid Air, the first model from California-based electric car start-up company Lucid Motors, has been named MotorTrend's 2022 Car of the Year. It's the first time any automaker has won the award with its first car. MotorTrend's panel of judges lauded the Lucid Air for its extraordinary range and efficiency -- some versions can go up to 520 miles on a single charge -- as well as its performance and luxurious interior. In its announcement, MotorTrend called the Air "the new [electric vehicle] benchmark." While the judges generally liked the Air's interior design, they did criticize what they saw as an over-reliance on touch screens for many basic controls. The judges praised the car's Lucid-designed stereo-system.

It's not the first time a start-up automaker has won the award. The Tesla Model S won it in 2012. But the Model S was Tesla's second car, after the Tesla Roadster. The Air is Lucid's first car, and it only recently went into production. Despite its high cost, MotorTrend's judges thought the Lucid Air represented a strong value. They tested the Grand Touring version with a starting price around $140,000. Less expensive versions, with prices starting around $77,000, will be available later, but they won't have the driving range and power of the pricier cars. Lucid's CEO, Peter Rawlinson, once worked at Tesla and helped engineer the Model S. In creating the Lucid Air, he has said, efficiency has been a primary focus. The Lucid is actually the most energy efficient electric car sold in America, according to EPA estimates.

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Lucid Air Named MotorTrend Car of the Year

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  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @05:27PM (#61994535) Journal

    It's a nice looking car, better in many ways than the Tesla, but it's not clear that it's worth $77k. Unless you really like luxury cars.

    • >"It's a nice looking car, better in many ways than the Tesla, but it's not clear that it's worth $77k. Unless you really like luxury cars."

      I just priced a loaded Infiniti Q50S, early this year... it is over $70K!
      I actually think this might be far more compelling. Tesla ruined the S with the stupid square steering wheel, huge center non-integrated screen, and other things. This sucker has a hugely functional dashboard, real steering wheel, nice controls, nicely integrated center console, deep and large

    • by Luthair ( 847766 )
      Its funny, I would say that the Model S was good looking but has aged into mediocrity over 10-years and the rest of the Tesla lineup started ugly and hasn't gotten better. However the Lucid Air to my eyes is probably the ugliest vehicle of all time, it looks like 2-3 different cars mashed together.
      • The model S looks good from some angles, but it also looks bad from some angles. Tesla did better with Lotus. The Lucid Air does look rather mediocre.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It looks very American. I don't mean that in a bad way, I just mean that American cars tend to look like that. Blunt nose that makes it look quite large and boxy, sweeping curves, and the saloon shape. That shape isn't very popular in Europe anymore, although some of the luxury German brands do it a bit. They tend to look a bit less box shaped though, which leads to poor use of space.

        EVs don't need a front grille. Some manufacturers fit fake ones, like BMW with the "kidneys" (they always looked more like a

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "... the ugliest vehicle of all time"

        The ugliest vehicle of "all time" is the Tesla truck, even though it hasn't shipped and won't for a long time. It is so ugly it transcends time.

  • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @05:35PM (#61994581)

    Which should surprise no one [cnbc.com].

    I guess if a car company with $232,000 in revenue (that's dollars, not thousands of dollars) in Q3 and who only sold their first car in early October is worth $85 billion then I guess Tesla's valuation makes more sense.

    Like do investors think that the traditional car companies will simply stop building cars when the switch to EVs happens?

    • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @10:14PM (#61995051) Homepage

      Like do investors think that the traditional car companies will simply stop building cars when the switch to EVs happens?

      Perhaps they remember how Kodak simply stopped producing film after the switch to digital photography happened.

    • Market valuation covers expectations and potential rather than actual revenue or profit. For established companies, those expectations usually more or less match those of the preceding few years unless they're investing a lot into new business, and it makes sense to look at indicators like P/E. For startups and businesses in heavy growth, P/E is not a good indicator.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      This might actually be a good thing.

      Innovation has stagnated in the UK. We couldn't have had our own Tesla because nobody would have invested the serious money needed to get it off the ground. In the UK investors seem to throw money at these startups, and while most of them fail sometimes they work out very well.

      The valuation is obviously based on the potential for Lucid to become a major car manufacturer and for the technology it has to become market leading. Those investors might lose everything, but in o

  • Clowns (Score:4, Funny)

    by NFN_NLN ( 633283 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @05:35PM (#61994583)

    > The judges praised the car's Lucid-designed stereo-system.

    "What are the engine specs?"

    "Beats me, but check out this stereo."

  • by yababom ( 6840236 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @06:52PM (#61994765)

    "Despite its high cost, MotorTrend's judges thought the Lucid Air represented a strong value."

    I don't think it's possible for a $144K car to have "strong value" in the mind of any real owner. Those who buy a car for $144K aren't concerned about value. In fact, every salesman knows that selling a $100K+ car based on it's 'strong value' will dull/cheapen the car in the eyes of potential customers, and this is reflected in the design of most luxury vehicles.

    • Resale value for a "one-of-a-kind" car (well, 2000-of-a-kind).
      This formula works for plenty other "limited production", "limited edition", "special production", ... cars - they're status symbols and will (hopefully) appreciate in time. For example, some Tesla Roadsters sell for more than their original price (original price quoted by Wikipedia 80-120k, market price 80-140k USD)

    • Came here to say something similar. "Strong value" is something that people without $144k to blow think about. It's also kind of meaningless when judging a car that has just hit the market, and part of "value" is its reliability and operational life. If they define "value" as being extra packed with bells and whistles, then that's a different definition than I suspect most people have.

      When I was a kid I had a friend whose parents bought this old used Mercedes diesel. We always thought it was funny that the

  • Amazing how many new vehicles are designed in California.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      How many? And why amazing?

      Is it amazing how many financial institutions are downtown? How many law offices are in nice buildings? How many grocery stores are near residential neighborhoods?

      There are reasons for these things, and many of those are money. And how many new cars are "designed in California" anyway? Can't wait for the Apple car, huh?

      • Did you miss that the American automotive industry has revolved around Michigan for like a century?

        I could care less about an Apple car. Just found it interesting that so much automotive design happens in CA.

        New vehicles designed in CA:
        Tesla
        Rivian
        Lucid
        XOS
        Wrightspeed
        Coda
        Fisker
        Phoenix
        AC Propulsion
        Zap
        American Honda
        Aptera
        Think
        Gorilla

        I'm sure there are more. And some of these will certainly fail. Nonetheless there is a lot happening around transportation in CA.

  • by thragnet ( 5502618 ) on Tuesday November 16, 2021 @07:30PM (#61994833)

    2018 Alfa Romeo Giulia / Giulia Quadrifoglio
    2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV
    2005 Chrysler 300
    2002 Ford Thunderbird
    2001 Chrysler PT Cruiser
    2000 Lincoln LS
    1999 Chrysler 300M
    1997 Chevrolet Malibu
    1992 Cadillac Seville Touring Sedan
    1991 Chevrolet Caprice Classic LTZ
    1990 Lincoln Town Car
    1989 Ford Thunderbird SC
    1988 Pontiac Grand Prix
    1987 Ford Thunderbird Turbo Coupe
    1986 Ford Taurus LX
    1985 Volkswagen GTI (built at Volkswagen's now-defunct Pennsylvania plant)
    1984 Chevrolet Corvette
    1983 Renault Alliance (built at AMC's Wisconsin plant)
    1982 Chevrolet Camaro Z28
    1981 Chrysler K Cars, Dodge Aries and Plymouth Reliant
    1980 Chevrolet Citation
    1979 Buick Riviera S
    1978 Chrysler, Dodge Omni and Plymouth Horizon
    1977 Chevrolet Caprice
    1976 Chrysler, Dodge Aspen and Plymouth Volare
    1975 Chevrolet Monza 2+2
    1974 Ford Mustang II
    1973 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
    1972 Citroën SM (an imported vehicle that was selected overall "Car of the Year")
    1971 Chevrolet Vega
    1960 Chevrolet Corvair

  • So they intend to build only one?

    In my opinion, the Tesla Model 3 should be "The car of the year" - beating Volkswagen Golf in its European home is, frankly, incredible.

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2021 @04:15AM (#61995421)
    There is a temptation to simplify the car's interior by removing controls, putting all the car functionality into a touch screen. But this is a terrible idea it worsens usability and has safety implications as drivers look away from the road more.

    Buttons and dials give feedback and use muscle memory. If I want to put the wipers on (or change their speed), or turn the volume up or down, or the AC up or down then I can reach for that thing, interact with a physical control and receive positive feedback. The likes of Tesla have strip it back to dangerous levels (even removing instrument clusters) so people are forced to look away continuously.

    I'd note that some manufacturers have tried to strike an almost as awful middle ground - capacitive buttons with haptic feedback. Volkswagen did this with the ID3 and ID4 and it is mindboggling. It's easy to invoke them by accident or for wet fingers to make them not work at all. Just. Use. Physical. Fucking. Buttons.

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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