The Toyota RAV4 is a small SUV that many people like because it's reliable and has a lot of space inside. It's good for families and for going on trips.
The Hyundai Palisade is a large SUV designed for families, offering plenty of space and features that make it comfortable for long drives. It's a popular choice for those needing more room than a regular car.
The Lucid Gravity is a new electric SUV from Lucid Motors, a company that focuses on luxury electric cars. It's designed to be very high-tech and comfortable, appealing to those looking for an upscale electric vehicle.
A quad motor setup means the vehicle has four electric motors, one for each wheel. This helps the truck perform better and have more control, especially off-road.
A plug-in hybrid is a type of car that uses both electricity and gasoline. You can charge it at home, and it can drive on electric power for a while before needing gas.
Car
Nissan Rock Creek
The Nissan Rock Creek is a version of a Nissan vehicle that looks more rugged and off-road ready. It has some features that make it look tough, but it may not be designed for serious off-road driving.
The Toyota 4Runner is a tough SUV that can handle rough terrain and is popular for outdoor adventures. It's known for being reliable and lasting a long time.
The Toyota Prius is a car that uses both gas and electricity to help save on fuel. It's known for being very efficient and is one of the first popular hybrid cars.
The Grand Wagoneer is a large, luxury SUV made by Jeep. It's designed for families and off-road adventures, and it's a newer version of an older model called the Wagoneer.
An EV, or electric vehicle, is a car that runs only on electricity, not gas. They are often better for the environment because they don't produce exhaust fumes.
A BEV is a car that runs only on electricity and doesn't use any gasoline. It gets its power from a battery that needs to be charged, usually at home or at charging stations.
The Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe is a type of SUV that can run on both gasoline and electricity. It can be charged at home or at charging stations, allowing for better fuel economy and less pollution when driving on electric power.
A fast charger is a special machine that charges electric cars much faster than regular chargers. This is helpful for people who need to quickly recharge their cars when they're out driving.
Driving 'on electricity only' means the car is using only its electric battery to move, not any gas. This helps save fuel and is better for the environment.
Grand Touring means a car that's made for comfortable long drives, combining speed and luxury. It's a special version of a car that has more features than the standard model.
Dual motors mean the car has two engines that work together, usually one for the front wheels and one for the back. This helps the car drive better, especially in different weather conditions.
Hummer is a type of vehicle that is big and tough, often used for off-road driving. It was originally made from military vehicles and became popular for regular people to drive.
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All right, well, you know, that that tangent.
I'm sorry.
I'm going to talk a little bit about what I'm driving this week.
Neither of you had anything to drive this week, but I have the Lucid Gravity
Grand Touring, you know, drove the gravity back in the spring out in
California and was really impressed with it.
You know, it's it's a for a luxury three row electric SUV.
You know, I it's probably my favorite of of what's available out there.
You know, probably the closest the closest direct competitor to it would be
something like the Mercedes EQS SUV.
And, you know, I frankly like this vehicle a lot better than the than the Mercedes.
You know, the the Grand Touring, you know, is the trim that they launched with.
That's the the high end trim.
So that means it's got dual motors.
It's got 828 horsepower.
You know, it's it's a pretty good size three row.
A lot of people looked at its profile and said, you know, this is really
more of a minivan than an SUV.
You know, you could make that argument, you know, it's it's lower than most.
It's certainly lower than off road SUVs.
You know, this is this is not something to meant to compete, you know, directly
against the capabilities of something like a Rivian R1S.
It's, you know, if anything, it's more wagon, you know, probably the closest
thing, you know, to compare it to in terms of its form factor is the Ford
Flex or, you know, even even the the latest iteration of the Kia Carnival.
You know, that's that's kind of the the shape that it has.
So it's not as tall, doesn't have that much ground clearance.
Although you can with the air suspension, you can get it up to nine inches
of ground clearance.
So it's not meant as an off roader, although, you know, you can take it
on some light trails if you raise the ride height up.
It's the interior.
They made a bunch of changes.
You know, you can you can see the evolution from the air to this.
You know, so you still have, you know, big upper screen.
Although now the the upper screen is just one continuous display rather
than three segments like it was in the air.
It's got a squared off steering wheel.
You know, so it's more like everybody has to have that these days,
apparently, but I guess you see the instrumentation because exactly.
So I was going to get at, you know, you flatten the top so you can
actually see the the instrument cluster in front of you.
And then instead of the retracting pilot screen, as they call it
in the air that that can pull back up into the dashboard, this one
has has a fixed lower center display.
So you can excuse me.
So you can have different information on the two screens, you know,
so you can, for example, have your maps on the upper screen.
You can have your media player down on the on the lower screen or vice
versa. You can flip things, switch things around.
You can also rather than you can also have up to three widgets
in the right hand portion of the screen, the infotainment part of the screen.
So you can have one little window that shows you your map view
and media player next to it and something else in the third one.
So, you know, I think overall it's a pretty good layout and it's fairly
it's a fairly easy to use interface.
It want my one of my complaints with it is navigating around a lot of the stuff.
There's a couple of touchpads, haptic controls on the spokes.
Wonderful, which we're kind of finicky to use.
They, you know, sometimes they work and, you know, so that it's a combination
of, you know, touch and also clickable.
So, you know, for those old enough to remember the Blackberry Storm.
It's kind of like that.
So it's a, you know, it's a four way
rocker on each of these switches on the two sides of the steering wheel.
And then you can also swipe across those.
So, for example, on the right hand one, you can swipe up or down and go
between the full, full, full infotainment display, like just the maps
or just the media player or the widgets.
And I forget what the third one, the third option is there.
On the left hand side, you've got your controls for your cruise control
and things like that, which when I was out driving the other day,
doing a longer drive, I found that very finicky.
I don't know if it's a software issue or a hardware issue with the switch itself.
You know, sometimes if I wanted to adjust the cruise control speed,
it would respond other times it wouldn't.
So that was, that was not great.
Well, they've had issues with the air software too, I've heard.
Yeah, yeah, there have been issues.
You know, and, you know, it's gotten better over the years.
It was certainly a lot worse when they first started,
but it's still not 100 percent.
Lucid does have a lot of the stuff is in the touchscreen,
but they do have most of the key controls like temperature control
and fan speed and volume control with physical controls
across the bottom of the the pilot screen, the lower screen.
So there's rockers for fan speed and temperature.
You can also adjust those by voice if you want.
And then there's a roller for volume,
which works works fine, works quite nicely.
So they've got that.
And also it's got manual vents, which is always a good thing.
You know, no, you don't have to go into the touch interface
to adjust where the air is blowing.
That's, you know, that to me is as always a non-starter.
Overall, I generally enjoyed driving this vehicle, even though,
you know, I I have I don't have a need for such a large vehicle.
You know, it's not it's large, but it's not as large as, say,
an Escalade IQ by any stretch of the imagination.
But there I found driving and I hadn't recall noticing this
when I drove it on the launch drive in the spring.
But especially if you put it in the most aggressive
regen mode, the it's it can be a little rough,
like right when you're starting to move or coming to a full stop.
It's not quite as the control of the motors is not quite as refined
as I would have hoped.
It's not bad, but, you know, it could it could use some tweaking
on the the calibration of that.
And that's something you're going to like that's something
you really do notice.
And like, when it's not right, it feels it feels not finished
or it feels cheap to me.
So if I if I just spent whatever the Manroni or vehicle is,
that would be a real turn off to me, knowing like it just it has
to be a smooth, especially when somebody like Nissan on a 30,000
dial leaf can get that right, even though it did take away one pedal.
But that's right.
That's a different discussion. But yeah.
So, you know, overall, you know, I generally it's a it's
a beautiful interior on this thing.
It's got the full glass roof, which, again, you know, can be
a little problematic sometimes, depending on where the sun is,
because sometimes it can be hard to block the sun.
You know, it's got got the got sun visors up there.
But it can be a little challenging sometimes.
This is a solution to a problem that doesn't exist.
And then what does it cost to replace that damn thing
when you inevitably get a stone chip?
Yeah. Why?
It's going to be many, many thousands of dollars a hail ball
the size of a basketball.
Yeah. I just or some kids are throwing
stones off the overpass, not that there's anything wrong with that.
But that that has never happened in Michigan, has it?
It probably has. It's terrible.
But yeah, like, what if it what if something hits it?
Like, what are you going to do?
It's the same with like the MBUX hyperscreen.
You know, somebody's going to crack that thing one day.
And what the hell is that going to cost to replace?
I can't even just sell the car to scrap it at that point.
Right. It's it's told.
Yeah, that that can happen.
The one thing this car did not have yet,
the gravity does not yet have is the hands free driving assist
that you that is now on the air.
So it's got, you know, hands on lane centering
and adaptive cruise control.
Again, something I noticed yesterday
while going for a drive for a couple of hours
is there were on three different occasions,
the adaptive cruise control would just say adaptive cruise control
not available. No indication why.
It wasn't it wasn't a case of the sun,
you know, blinding the cameras or anything like that,
because it was facing the wrong direction.
So I'm not sure what was going on there.
So again, needs needs some work on the software.
But, you know, the the interior, you know, the seats are very comfortable.
The this one had massaging seats in it in the front row.
It's got second row heated seats.
The front seats are also heated and ventilated.
So, you know, most of the stuff that you would expect in a luxury vehicle.
One one thing that's kind of unique to the gravity
that nobody else really has is for the front,
they have an optional pad that goes in there,
that you can flip out and basically use it as a as a bench.
So you can open up the front and you can have two people can sit there.
You know, so if you're watching the sunset or something, you know, pull up,
pull up to the beach, you know, sit there, watch the sunset
and then fold the pad back into the the front, close the lid
and get back in the car and drive home.
There's there's plenty of cargo space in here.
You can get it with two or three rows.
The one I was driving has three rows in it.
It is very quick.
You know, it'll do sub three seconds, zero to 60 with 828 horsepower.
They what else was on this one?
There's also a performance, an optional performance package
that mine did not have.
And that gives you the
so that's the dynamic handling package that gives you a different airbag system.
So there's the standard airbag system just has single chamber airbags,
which is what was on the car I'm driving.
The dynamic handling package gives you triple rate airbags
of three different spring rates, three chamber system
that gives you a little little more control over
the wheel motions and body motions.
And it can lift it from between as low as five inches up to nine inches.
It also has rear wheel steering and painted brake calipers.
Oh, no, sorry, mine, mine did have that package on there.
The.
You know, I didn't do much, you know, aggressive driving in windy roads this week.
But when we drove it in the spring, we did get a chance to drive it
on some fairly fun roads near Santa Barbara.
And, you know, for a vehicle this size, it it handles really well.
It's it's really nice to drive.
See, there's also the surreal sound system pro,
which is a twenty two speaker sound system.
You need thirty five speakers at least.
I know.
It's delayed, right? I mean, twenty two.
That's for the pores, Sam.
If you have enough, if you have enough lots, though,
exactly.
And this one also had the optional twenty two, twenty three inch wheel and tire package.
So the standard setup, you get twenty inch front wheels, twenty one inch rears.
And then the first option is twenty one fronts, twenty two rears.
And this one had twenty two fronts and twenty three inch rears,
which are very big wheels and tires.
Really not necessary.
The wheels look really nice.
The great looking wheels.
You know, you don't need that and it does eat significantly into your range.
So if you get the base setup, the twenty and twenty one inch wheels,
it's rated at four hundred and thirty seven miles of range
with the twenty twos and twenty threes.
It's three hundred and eighty six miles.
And actually there is.
Let's see. Yeah, three hundred and eighty six.
There's also a package that drops it down
to to just three hundred and seventy eight miles.
How are you supposed to rotate those tires when they're staying?
You're not. You're not supposed to.
You have to dismount them then every time.
Well, the tires are different sizes.
That's true. Yes, but you're not flopping side to side.
You don't do that with no radials.
So you just you're just done then.
OK, another reason not to do that.
But Michelin's happy. Michelin's happy. Of course they are.
I can go and put like whatever
next in tires on your hundred thousand dollar.
I believe Michelin is their tire.
So so this one is rated at three hundred and eighty six miles.
Which is so pretty good. Fantastic.
Yeah, no, it's very good.
Although, you know, as is typically been the case,
you know, Lucid's tend to be on the more efficient side of the EV spectrum.
But they like Tesla.
They also usually fall short of their official EPA ratings.
So in this case, you know,
I was averaging two point seven miles per kilowatt hour over the week,
which with one hundred and twenty three kilowatt hour battery works out
to only three hundred and thirty two miles, which is closer.
You know, it's about what I was seeing.
It does charge very fast.
It's like it's a nine hundred and twenty kilowatt or nine hundred and twenty
volt electrical system on this thing.
And other tests have seen it
charge at almost four hundred kilowatts on the right charge if you have the right charger.
I took it over to my local supercharger yesterday
because this thing does have a native J 3400 charging port or NAX port.
So I took it over to the supercharger station.
The gravity does have plug in charge built in.
So I just pulled out the cord out of the charging dispenser, plugged it in the car.
And within about 15 seconds, it was charging.
And when I plugged it in, it was at 26 percent state of charge.
And it quickly climbed up to about two hundred and twenty eight kilowatts of charging.
And it stayed there for quite a while.
Even when it when I unplugged it at 80 percent charge,
it was still going 110 kilowatts.
Sam was causing a local brownout in the Ann Arbor area.
So you can blame those folks.
That was the escalate IQ that was doing well.
I killed those.
I killed one of the the charging stations in Nipsey County.
The early left of America ones.
I kept throttling thermal throttling those with the with the Hummer.
Oh, yeah.
I pulled in when I pulled into the supercharger yesterday,
which is just down the road from that E.A. station.
There was an ID buzz, an escalate IQ and a Maki rally all charging there.
Wow. Well, diversity of vehicles.
How about that? The nice the nice thing about version three superchargers,
even though they peak at two hundred and fifty kilowatts is
that's two hundred and fifty kilowatts to each pole.
So so you don't have to worry about like
splitting or sharing with the person next to you.
So, Sam, my model three is on either side of me while I was charging.
Yeah, like he might cause a brownout with that particular charging pedestal,
but he won't ruin anyone else's day.
So well, unless they have sensitive electronics at home that need the full.
So is the so is the lucid air like their dream pie in the sky?
Thirty thousand foot vehicle and the gravity brings it back down to earth.
Is that why it's in the air and a gravity?
It's it's it's kind of in between because the next model is coming out next year,
the midsize that's actually supposed to be called the earth, the lucid earth.
Are they going to have I hate this one on there?
This was gently floating down.
They named them after clouds like Cirrus and Stratus.
I think that's been done somewhere.
Oh, damn. Yes.
The one criticism that I'll have in Sam,
you said the same thing regarding software.
I like the idea of physical buttons,
but I've been in some cars and the lucid air was one of them where even
like there was still a software layer between the physical buttons.
So like Craig, that last era that I drove, whatever the mama thing,
like one of the drivers side window wouldn't go down.
And I don't think that it was a minute.
I don't think it was an error.
Well, it wasn't a button switch error.
I think it was a computer error error.
And the blazer EV when I first drove that before they had to stop sale
and and the recall, there were physical buttons for climate control
and stuff, but they froze.
They didn't work because there was, again, a software layer in between.
And in theory, I like the idea of a wasn't working.
It's the can't bus.
It's the can't bus.
Yeah. In theory, I like the idea of a software behind vehicle.
I do. But in practice, I think that there still needs to be some work.
And I do think that loosens are extremely efficient.
Their battery motor combinations are really next level in engineering.
They just need somebody to buy them.
I think. Yeah, they have Saudi money, though, don't they?
They have unlimited funds, you know, they don't have infinite patience.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I think the Germans, the Germans, I mean, the new stuff
from Mercedes Benz is pretty good.
The new the new A-class or however you pronounce it, the new class
BMW stuff's really good.
And does that even exist anymore?
I don't know. But I like what Lucid's doing at some level.
I think they're I think the luxury is there.
I like I think they do stuff very clever.
And I think their engineering is really solid.
They just have some bugs that really needed to quash.
And I feel like if they were bought out by somebody that could really.
Get there.
I mean, you know, some years ago before Apple gave up on trying
to get into the car business, you know, I had made the suggestion
on multiple occasions that, you know, instead of trying to develop their own,
they should just buy Lucid because, you know, if there's any car company
that is closest to kind of Apple's way of thinking,
you know, it would be Lucid, you know, and the thing that the thing
that Lucid has always needed, you know, is, you know, more operational
expertise, you know, in dealing with supply chains and manufacturing
and those sorts of things.
And that's the stuff that Apple is great at.
And specifically, it's him, Apple.
I mean, yeah, because Steve Jobs brought him in to
as the CEO as the operations manager, because it was like,
and that's when iPhone went from, hey, here's a fun little project
to global domination.
Yeah. And while the Intel era for Apple computers
in hindsight, not particularly greats
at the helm, Sam Apple, you know, that moved to Silicon and the integration
and how well everything now is optimized and works well.
No, I don't think Apple should buy it.
I don't think Apple should make cars. Not now.
I could I could see how Lucid would be a good fit
if they wanted to get into that business.
Yeah. But they've they've given up on that.
So which is probably good for them.
They shouldn't have been thinking about it anyway.
I wouldn't want the liability.
You know, for for a company that likes, you know, operating on 40 percent profit
margins, getting into the car business was always an insane proposition.
Yeah. Yeah.
One one other detail with the with the gravity
that I've also experienced with the air is the door handles.
You know, so the door handles pop out, you know, they when they're
normally they sit flush with the rest of the door.
You know, and when as you approach, they're supposed to pop out.
And a lot of the time, probably maybe a third to a half of the time
when I walk up to the car with the key fob in my pocket and, you know,
have a key fob and there's also an NFC card, which doesn't seem to work at all.
You know, the doors did not pop out
unless I would actually take it out of my pocket.
So that was you've got those Faraday cage pants on again.
I know, you know, a copper lined trouser.
They told me not to use those when I'm driving, but it's can't help myself.
Comfortable and breathable, I know.
Well, and you're trying to protect, you know,
your insides on radiation. Exactly.
So that, you know, that was that was a little finicky.
I mean, they always opened up, you know, once I pulled the fob out of my pocket.
But, you know, having it in my pocket and not opening just, you know,
was kind of annoying.
Well, hopefully the Chinese are going to fix the problem for all of us
by banning stupid door handles and hopefully that catches on.
So, yeah, that would be nice.
That would be very nice.
So, you know, the Mineroni that I got
is not actually the one for the car I was driving
because it lacks some of the some of the things that were on this car.
The car I had was finished in Aurora Green metallic, which is a lovely color.
You know, Lucid, unfortunately, doesn't have any really bold colors,
especially on the gravity.
But the Aurora Green is a good color shades of gray. Yeah.
And the German rainbow.
Yeah, all together, it came to a grand total of one hundred and seventeen
thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars.
Now, which is thirty five grand less,
forty grand less than an escalate IQ.
Yeah, it's about forty grand less than an escalate.
It's less than the EQS, the CV, which I don't care for at all.
It's it's a ton of money, but it's also.
Yeah, I mean, when you look at it in the context of the segment,
it's expensive, but it's it's not insanely expensive.
Like, you know, I would I would probably take this over a Volvo EX 90,
which is similarly priced like the starting price for the grand touring
is ninety four thousand nine hundred.
So ninety five thousand dollars.
Right. And didn't they lower it recently?
Well, they just announced this week at the LA Auto Show,
they announced the Gravity Touring Trim.
So that's what it is, a lower trim, not as grand, but not not quite as grand.
But you could still tour, but still still very nice.
And that one starts at seventy nine nine.
That one does have a slightly smaller battery.
Yeah, so it's been decontented a bit.
The batteries, they took a few modules out of the battery.
So that brings it down to I think eighty nine kilowatt hours.
Yeah, eighty nine kilowatt hours from the hundred and twenty three for the grand touring.
And, you know, that's that still gets you
over three hundred, let's see, three over three hundred miles of range
for the for the touring trim.
And, you know, it charges very fast.
You know, it'll add two hundred mile on an appropriate charger.
It'll add two hundred miles of range in about 15 minutes.
Zero to sixty four.
The for the grand touring is about three point four seconds.
It's four seconds for the touring, which is still more than fast enough.
You know, nobody nobody needs that kind of that kind of speed.
So that that cheaper model puts you in within five grand of like an ionic million.
Mm hmm. And an E V nine at the higher end specs.
I don't know.
I'd have to I mean, I'd have to drive one.
But that's I mean, all these cars are stupid.
It's one seven.
I can't believe that I'm saying that any of these are a good deal.
But I love the ionic nine and but their software at least works.
But like I feel like if I could get into a lucid experience for not much money.
Yeah. I mean, I would if I if I was buying, you know,
if I was looking at a top of the line ionic nine versus the touring,
the grand, you know, the gravity touring,
I I think I would have to very seriously consider the gravity.
Yeah. The problem is Hyundai will be around in five years.
That that will lose it.
Beast. Yeah.
Well, they will honor your warranty if they're out of business.
And there and therein lies the problem with software to find vehicles.
You know, it things, you know, become very iffy down the road.
If the creator of your software to find vehicle finds themselves
undefined, so like I like I had like I had Rick Fisker.
Yeah. I mean, you could say that theoretically, Chad.
Made in theory as an example.
As an example.
I mean, just had Rick Fisker.
Yeah. I mean, Craig, you weren't there.
Sam, did you go to that GM thing a couple of weeks ago or whatever in New York?
Yeah, I was there in New York. You were there. Yeah.
Yeah, my brain doesn't work anymore.
I'm getting old.
But I mean, Fiskers are everywhere.
Like I mean, I knew I'd see them everywhere, but it was still wild,
like walking out of the hotel or that they knew at any random time.
The company is about, you know, all the unsold inventory,
you know, basically put them into taxi and ride hailing fleets in New York.
Yeah, there's a really good one around.
There's a really good half as interesting video.
So it's like six minutes long and half as interesting.
You would shoot your channel right around the same time that that event happened
that does a fantastic job at sort of explaining
why all those cars are in New York and how they're fixing them.
And I don't necessarily want to say I learned anything really new,
but it was really fun to see it presented that way.
And I'll I'll send you a link for the show notes because I think it's really worth sharing.
But yeah, software defined.
I hate that term so much.
Yes, just like all the other words.
New improved.
There's some there's some nice potential
capabilities with a software defined vehicle, you know, over, you know,
you can upgrade the capabilities of the vehicle over its lifespan.
You can charge.
The problem is you have to support that software.
And you have to support the underlying hardware that that makes it work.
And, you know, there's there's certain things that shouldn't be software defined.
Like, for example, which direction your vents are facing.
That correct.
That should be hardware defined, not software defined.
Yeah, correct.
And your door handles, which is probably just fine to have a mechanical latch.
You know, I'm OK with that. Absolutely.
Those should absolutely be.
Sam, when you were talking about the buttons on the steering wheel,
it made me think of a really stupid idea, which would be,
do you remember the old IBM, not Lenovo, not before Lenovo bottom,
but the old IBM ThinkBads that had the little red nubby.
Yep. In the middle.
I like that. I did.
So I had like that.
I worked for a number of years.
Yeah, put that on a steering wheel.
If you're going to do some weird sort of swiping dials, touch sensitive,
whatever, just put a little red nub right in the middle.
Just like the Lexus remote touch system, right?
Where you've had a little track, track, remote touch, track,
to bring back the IBM track pad.
Yes, make make IBM great.
Good.
I think I think it's too late for that.
But I think it probably is.
They should get around.
Yeah.
So, you know, again, like the air, you know, there's a lot to like
about the gravity, but there's just, you know, there's little details
that are not quite finished.
Oh, one, one other detail that I noticed the other day when I was all
it was trying to do is just reposition the car in my driveway.
And I realized that one of the software defined capabilities is
there's a subscription for reverse.
No, no, it's just the transmission selector.
It will not go into drive or reverse unless your seat belt is
latched. Oh, yeah.
So, I mean, I when I'm driving, I always wear a seat belt as everyone should.
As you should.
But sometimes if I'm just moving the car a few feet to
reposition it in my driveway, you know, I will just hop in, you know,
just to reposition it.
And I realized why won't this go into drive?
Oh, I joke.
Latched the seat belt and all of a sudden it worked.
Yeah.
I've joked about this with some automakers, but I'm actually pretty serious.
Like there should be an auto journalist like a setting that like below
like three miles an hour or two or three miles an hour.
That kind of stuff doesn't activate.
You know, you don't necessarily get the seat belt warning chime.
The automatic headlights are off.
The mirrors stay out instead of closed in.
It's like a car wash mode, but just for us, the mirrors stay out.
Oddly specific demographic.
The doors don't automatically lock like, but if everything's software defined,
it's just like just get some one just to just have it behind a special code.
You know, so you tap in a code on the screen and then it gives you a journalist mode.
Yeah, that gives you can take your photos with the lights on.
The the door handles retracted, the mirrors out.
Yeah.
Because gosh, I hate getting in.
Stellantis vehicles are pretty common for this.
I'll get one and the last person had the the instrument cluster brightness
clicked all the way up to the permanent daytime mode blinding.
Yeah.
And then I'll climb in at night and then I can't see for an hour
because it just seared my retinas out.
You know, that's a feature they had on their older models, too,
with the the wheel for adjusting the brightness of the cluster.
For whatever reason, there was that one extra setting that would just
I don't know what the logic was.
So in the GM car, I used to own that last click would also turn on the
dome light to turn the brightness all the way up.
And then don't like, which was also, I don't know, we're from the company
that put the controls on the wipers on the turn signal stock, along with the
high beams and everything.
I'm surprised they didn't put it on the gear selector as well.
And what other features can they fan speed?
Maybe they can sneak that on there, too.
Remember when you could adjust fan speed and climate control on the steering
wheel, like when there were separate buttons for that GM did that in the 90s.
90s early 2000s.
Like you had radio controls.
Oh, yeah, that was, you know, that was in the time when they had like 30 buttons
on the steering wheel, Pontiac did that.
That's the driving excitement.
Well, you get my reading glasses.
Which button is it now?
And it's the scene from Tommy Boyd, where he smashes the car on the desk.
Says the guy who had a Windows phone when we were talking about old
blackberries.
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I had so much.
But speaking, I'm going to segue us into Continuous Stellantis, maybe.
OK, yeah, let's talk about the Jeep Recon.
Let's talk about that.
So I saw this.
We've seen this car for two or three years now.
Yeah, I mean, I think they first showed the first released photos
of the wagon near us and the Recon back in 2022, I want to say.
I think it was it was late 22 in the fall of 22.
And then the first time I saw it in person was like March or so of 2024.
When Antonio Filosa was.
Yeah, they did a roundtable with Antonio Filosa in Auburn Hills,
and they had the wagon near us and the Recon there.
And then, you know, I've been seeing him around here
on the roads for at least the last six, nine months of testing.
But, you know, now they are finally releasing it.
You know, they finally gave us, you know,
specs and pricing and everything.
Is it the all electric Jeep you were hoping for?
It is the all electric Jeep.
It certainly is one.
If you need a Jeep with battery power, the Recon will do that.
So, you know, Jeep, you know, over the last four or five years
has at the Easter Jeep Safari, they did three different iterations
of a battery electric Wrangler,
called the Magneto, you know, that continued to evolve over over the years.
And this, you know, this sort of fits in the same segment as the Wrangler.
But, you know, it doesn't have the Wrangler kind of styling to it.
You know, it's more of anything, you know, it's more like an electric Bronco.
It does have removable doors.
It's got the Sky OneTouch folding fabric roof panel.
You can take out the rear quarter windows and the rear, the rear hatch glass
so you can have that open air look.
And actually, the way they do the doors is pretty clever.
Yes, because, you know, on the Wrangler, you know,
they've got a little tool set in the center console,
you know, some Allen wrenches that you've got to use, you know,
to take the doors out anymore.
Now, you just open the doors past 90 degrees and lift them right off the hinge
and then don't forget to unplug the harness.
Yeah, same with Wranglers.
Wow, 26 Wranglers all have that.
Oh, did they do that on the Wrangler too?
It's such innovation.
Yeah, they still mount the mirrors, the side mirrors on the door sill.
So when you take off the doors, they had the frameless doors
and they left the mirrors attached to the body.
And that's very easy to store the doors.
It is, but it's also if you're driving down a really narrow trail,
you may not want the mirrors on at all.
So then. Hold still to get you narrower.
Yeah, but you'll still probably scratch them up.
But if the trail is that narrow, there's a good chance
you're going to pinstripe the paint anyway.
So that's a cheap thing, Sam.
I just wouldn't understand.
So this thing is built on the Stella Large Platform,
which is the same platform as the wagon you're S
and the Dodge Charger Daytona.
Oh, boy, good luck.
Nicole had some had some thoughts on that, I'm sure.
Oh, yeah.
And it's got the same 100 point five kilowatt hour battery pack.
But because it has the aerodynamic profile of,
you know, basically a big block of wood
and a very large block of wood
and it sits higher than those other vehicles.
The range is not great.
Uh, 650 horsepower from the dual motors
for, you know, at least for the initial versions
they're launching, which is not necessary.
And yeah, zero to 60 and three point six seconds for,
you know, what is nominally an off-roader.
Again, not really necessary.
And it goes about the Moab, the Moab trim,
which is a new trim they're launching.
That's the off-road version.
Two hundred and thirty miles on a charge.
For sixty five thousand dollars.
No, this is dead on arrival, I'm afraid.
I mean, if they didn't learn, it must be a case of,
of sunk cost fallacy.
They were probably so far along with the development of this vehicle,
right, that they have to bring it out at this point,
even though who's going to buy it for that price at that range?
Like, who is this for?
The mistakes started
probably before even the Filosa came to jeep.
Oh, certainly.
But, but when Filosa got into jeep,
I liked what Filosa says to say, I think he's a smart guy.
And I think him overrunning overall everything long term is probably a good play.
But what happened was Filosa came in
and he had a lot of stuff he needed to fix.
And there were things that just got higher priority.
So like recon had to have been done for almost a year
because as Sam had said, I've been seeing them.
Well, it was supposed to launch last fall.
Yeah. But, you know, there was a lot of software and quality issues
that they were addressing with Wagoneer S,
which was supposed to come out first and then the charger.
Charger had as well, you know.
But then suddenly it got pushed, it must have gotten pushed to the side
because suddenly it's like, oh, no, we got to get Cherokee out the door.
Oh, no, we got to get Grand Cherokee out the door.
Oh, well, we got to get this new wagon, Wagoneer out the door.
So then it just became getting pushed back and pushed back and pushed back.
And every time I'd ask about it to be like, oh, yeah,
we just had to get more important stuff out the door.
Well, now it's too late.
Now, now it's too late.
This should be a mid-cycle refresh of this product at this point
and not the launch.
And I don't know who it's for.
I did an interview with ABC News last week
and we ultimately ended up on you should buy or you should buy a forerunner
because it's like, well, if you want this,
why would you get all this crappy range when you could get a Wrangler
or you could get a Bronco, but then, you know,
you could send in the kind of the tradeoffs with the with the Bronco
and the Wrangler with roof and the age and stuff like that.
Because this car has a luxury kind of focused interior.
It's nice inside.
So if you want it off road, it's a little more than the Wrangler four door.
You know, so if you want something off roady, that's nice inside.
Yeah. Forerunners are really good.
But, you know, the problem is, you know,
it's only got nine point one inches of ground clearance.
Yeah. And you said that Lucid that you were just in had nine.
Yeah. When you put it in highest mode, that luxury minivan
has as much ground clearance as this. Yeah.
As this is trail rated, I'm sure.
You know, Wrangler Rubicon is about 13 inches of ground clearance.
It is trail rated, you know, which at least, you know,
nominally, you know, is supposed, you know, for Jeep is supposed
to mean that it's capable of doing the Rubicon trail.
And we'll see if it can actually do that or not.
Because they would put it on like the Patriot, too, wouldn't they?
Like it was trail rated.
Well, the Renegade had it, the Renegade had a trail rated version.
There you go.
Yes, I mean, you could probably, you could probably show
every the Camry at this point.
I mean, maybe they'll do a Camry Woodland edition.
I did ask, but they'll care that too well.
No, I want a Camry Woodland.
Do it, Accio. Do it.
Well, the thing, the thing with this, this recon, you know,
the Recon Moab, you know, is riding on 33 inch wheels and tires.
And, you know, you could get an extra
inches, an extra inch of ground clearance if you could put it on 35s.
But you look at it, it doesn't look like you could fit 35s in there.
And when people asked Jeep about that, whether it was
whether 35s would fit, they would not answer the question.
They said over the aftermarket.
For your audience to understand, I'm sure they do already.
But like, when you talk about like a proper off-roading Jeep,
almost always somebody in the audience in the background
will ask, will it take 37s?
Will it do 40s?
Can you do 35s, 37s, 40s?
When they announced the JL Wrangler, first thing they said was like,
look, it'll do 37s. No problem.
Well, gladiator, especially the 37s, no problem.
You'd need a lift for 40s.
That has been sort of this mindset on those dedicated off-roaders.
They test this stuff.
They'd like it.
They know the aftermarket is going to want it.
These questions are going to need to be answered.
And this is the first time on something
that supposedly is off-road capable in my time doing this job
where they would not answer that question.
And that, I mean, that tells me nearly everything.
My guess is that 35s will not fit on this thing.
Probably without rubbing.
Not without rubbing in the wheel wells.
And it's got independent suspension all around.
Doesn't even have a solid rear axle.
So, you know, that's that's going to be a perfect for 99 percent
of the people that you. Oh, sure. Oh, yeah.
Sure. That's absolutely true.
But yeah. But why not a Wrangler?
But then who's it for?
I don't know.
It does. It does have a lot of money on it.
Even like, I don't even care if they make money.
I just want to know who it's for, because if it's for an off-roader
somebody that goes camping or something on the weekends,
but once kind of a nicer luxury kind of experience,
what's wrong with a grand Cherokee, especially because they're
still going to do the Trailhawk trams like those will get you
to most campsites anywhere.
And if you want something serious, you're going to buy a Wrangler.
Yeah, I mean, this does have an electronic locking rear differential.
It does.
And, you know, they changed the final drive ratio from 11 to one
on the grand wagon or on the wagon or S to 15 to one.
So, you know, it so it doesn't have a proper low range
like you would get in a Wrangler, but it does, you know,
it does have a significantly lower final drive ratio.
And that's part of why the range is so short, too.
Yeah. And off-roading and off-roading a full
Bev is a fun experience because, you know, you're not dealing
with a torque converter or you're not dealing with any of those sorts of
of kind of powertrain losses between your foot,
the application, your foot and what that tire does on that rock.
So, like, but you can get that experience with the Wrangler four by.
So, yeah, I don't know.
It's going to be interesting to see how many of these
they can actually sell.
I think the number is going to be pretty modest.
Yeah, especially the price, the range.
Yeah. I mean, they could pull a charger and throw an ice engine in there.
Well, style large can do it.
You know, they in principle, yes.
You know, when you look at this thing in profile, though,
you know, it's if anything, it's going to have to be a transverse
engine in the front because the hood is not as long as it is
on a Wrangler, for example.
So that hurricane straight six ain't going to fit.
You're definitely not going to fit a 392 in this thing.
Yeah. Yeah.
But what you could potentially do is the new,
you know, put, you know, put a four cylinder engine in there
and do an E-Rap.
A new turbo four.
You could do an E-Rap with a four cylinder.
Yeah.
Or what they could do, they could fit the straight six
if they just put in one of those dog houses that they used to have
on the conversion vans so that half of the cylinders
can just be right in the center console.
Then you could fit the straight six, maybe.
There you go.
And have an easy time servicing the spark plugs.
Yeah.
I mean, they put a pretty ugly hood on the charger
to get that straight six to fit.
So.
And, you know, at SEMA, they showed a charger, a drag race charger
with a hemi in there.
So.
Well, there's a red necklace away.
Yeah.
So anything is possible if you want, if you want it bad enough.
Yeah. And you have money.
Yeah.
But yeah, I just might at the end of the day,
like I liked it when I saw it the first time Sam was with you
and we saw it in person there in Auburn Hills.
Again, I thought it was cool.
But that was before we knew the grand Cherokee refresh was coming.
That's before we kind of knew exactly how how
Wagonier was going to, you know, you know, come, you know, sort things out.
Like it is kind of.
And also before we knew how problematic the Wagonier is going to be.
Yeah.
Well, and the charger has had similar problems.
So, yeah.
The software defined part of their of their electric vehicles
has not been delivering what it needs to software is hard.
Software can be hard.
I. Yeah.
Yeah, turns out the story, folks.
Just keep those air vents mechanical and the door latches as well.
And you'll be miles ahead of a lot of automakers.
Yeah. All right.
Something else that made its North American debut
the LA auto show this week was the Hyundai Ioniq 6N.
Love it.
So this is basically, you know, the five end in a four door body,
you know, with with a few more tweaks to it, 641 horsepower,
simulated shifting, you know, all kinds of simulated engine noises.
They've upgraded the simulated sound system
from a two channel set up to six channel.
So supposedly it sounds even better when you're driving it.
All the speakers for your fake engine.
Wow. Yeah, exactly.
It needs a frat sonic chambered exhaust system.
Yeah. So people on the outside can hear it.
Exactly. Yeah.
All of the muscle car enthusiasts cry some more.
I like the Ioniq 5.
I like how the Ioniq 6 drives better.
Has longer wheelbase, things like that.
I adore the Ioniq 5N.
My favorite, my favorite EV period so far.
And the idea that it could just be better.
Sign me up. I'm hooked.
Give me, give me, give me, give me, give me.
When I first saw the 5N in LA a couple of years ago,
you know, and they were announcing it, you know, I thought,
oh, man, this sounds like such a gimmick.
Yeah. Then I drove it.
And what a hoot it was to drive.
I was, I remember, I remember I drove it to the,
yeah, we're at the launch of Laguna Seca at
and we was the road around around the track
down towards the hotel and I drove casually down the hill
and I turned around to come back up the hill
and I put it in the end with the full shift thing.
And I missed the first shift, missed that first one to shift.
The fake rev limiter, this fake rev limiter.
And it threw me forward and I just started cackling
like a maniacal person.
Like it was so intellectually, I know what they're doing.
But how they refined all of the artificialness
to feel real is incredible
because they're not just cutting power.
It's not just a power cut.
They're adjusting the dampers
and they're doing all of these little things
and they're adjusting the power delivery of the electric motor.
So it feels more natural, feels more linear.
And it's fake, but it's like Star Trek holodeck fake.
It's not. It's I.
I'm very convinced they're able to do it.
It is. It is. You wouldn't.
I would be willing to bet money.
You put your plug, especially if you put your plugs in somebody
so they can't hear the fake engine noise,
which I can tell is fake, but it doesn't sound super fake.
But if you put your plugs in them,
they wouldn't know that it's not a real transmission.
Yeah, they just wouldn't.
They did a very convincing job of simulating
an eight speed dual clutch automatic.
And all the flibbles, all the flibbles of one, too.
Like they made it.
Then it behaves like an Elantra N.
But with they made the car by making it.
They made the car better by making it worse.
Yeah. Yeah. And God bless them.
Six hundred and forty one.
And the beauty of it is you can turn it on and off
so you can drive around normally.
And then, you know, when you're on a twisting country road
or you do in a track day,
you just flip it into N mode and it all comes to life.
It's amazing.
And unlike Mercedes-Benz, who's now doing it
or will be doing it in their new
AMG GT replacement, I wrote in the prototype
earlier this year, which also is really good.
But they only allow that fake shifting
and stuff in Sport Plus or an S Plus
with the ionic five and presumably with the six.
You can do the fake shifting in normal mode.
So it actually it'll still power deliver the same way.
It'll feel like you're just driving a normal car,
a normal gas power car.
So you can still have that experience, if you want it,
without having to be in full on balls out, you know, and and load.
You know, one thing I didn't care.
I drove the end, the ionic five end a couple of years back.
The one thing that I didn't care for was that
sort of a BMW element to the vehicle
and that there are so many settings.
You get into the menu for the chassis and the braking feel.
Whatever, like just who needs this?
Why? Simplify.
Don't make it more complicated.
But I guess if you want to get in there and tinker around, great.
But I don't see a lot of people using that necessarily.
Yeah, there needs to be like three.
But yeah, it needs to be like three settings.
Everything in full attack mode,
mm hmm.
Everything in comfort, quiet, efficient mode.
Yeah.
And then the journalist mode, which is everything in this
that the suspension and everything in the soft, comfortable mode,
but the exhaust super loud was the three settings that you don't.
You know, one thing, one of the things that disappointed me
about the the Charger Daytona was it's got panels on the steering wheel
and they could have done this and they still could.
They could do an OTA software update to enable this same kind of thing.
But they first for whatever reason they chose not to.
And that that would make so much sense in a car like that.
It's because they've never driven.
They've never driven an Anak 5M.
I'm convinced nobody in Auburn Hills has driven one
because the big problem with the Charger
is if you're going down the highway at sixty five miles an hour.
It's a fantastic cruiser.
Yeah, it is.
But it feels like the red like, but if you have the
frats on it turned on, it feels like you're like five or six thousand RPM.
And it sounds like like it sounds like it's instantly droning.
And then if you have regions set to anything other than the lowest setting,
it gives you a little too much engine braking.
So what if, you know, air quotes, engine braking.
So it feels like you need to shift the car.
Like it feels like it's missing a gear.
And that's super duper annoying
unless you turn the frats on it can stuff off.
And then then it's just a normal EV
because you're right, it's an excellent cruiser.
But it needs it needs that.
And, you know, caniscus pre Trump promised us, you know,
oh, the Banshee is going to have this multi-speed gearbox
and we're going to be able to deliver on whatever happened to that
in a mix of a way between a mix of a way between Porsche does it
and the way that like Hyundai does it.
And then, of course, that's dead.
So I hate that we're using this hope.
I hate them using this whole podcast to crap on Stelitus.
But their EV offerings have just
they're very they the first generation.
There was so much potential there.
And they were already in second and third.
Yeah, like an all electric charger should be bonkers.
And in a lot of ways it was, you know,
an all electric powertrain makes a car feel more luxurious
like wagging your ass.
Yeah, that should be, you know,
should be the way to deliver there.
And it's just it plagued the software issues.
Yeah. And then you and then you drive into something
you kind of something fun and like the iron again.
And you're just like it's it's night and day.
It's it's it's it's like an ode to the attic.
Five N is like an ode to auto enthusiasts.
Like if this if this whole future is electric,
this is like the this is like the automakers
out of branch to the enthusiasts to be like, look,
we didn't forget about you.
And I look forward to driving the six.
I'm sure it's.
So the the other thing that Hyundai unveiled,
which is actually a global debut was a concept car
or concept vehicle called the Crater.
Which, you know, what a name you look at.
When you look at this thing, you know,
it doesn't have a grill.
They didn't talk anything about, you know, a powertrain.
But I could I could imagine this thing using EGMP hardware
and doing what Jeep wanted to do with the recon,
but doing it right.
Yep.
It looks like it has portal axles, too,
because there's like in the renders, at least there's no.
No suspension under there.
I don't see anything in the middle of the.
It could it might.
You never know.
I mean, it's a concept.
So who knows.
Anything.
But they've taken this whole like Hyundai has gone full pixel
and like have really embraced it.
Like I thought they were going to kind of embrace it,
but they have really embraced it.
And they've carried a lot of that over to production vehicles.
And I think the interior of this thing is.
I don't know if it's good, wild to me, but it is wild.
With with the pixelated displays and this idea of like,
especially like the drive mode selector and things like that,
it is very retro future.
It's the 80s, but like the 80s, we were promised the future
were promised in the 80s.
And I don't know if that's a good thing or not,
but I kind of dig it.
And the creator concept, the attic three,
which was the concept three that they showed.
Like or earlier this year also had a moon vibe to it.
So they're really leaning into now the outer spaceness
of their concepts.
I don't know why, just a trend that I'm kind of noticing.
But yeah, you take that is like, and you know,
Hyundai's been gradually easing into the off-road thing
with their XRT trims.
Yeah.
And which are, you know, on the on the policy,
they've got the XRT pro now, you know,
which is surprisingly capable for the type of vehicle it is.
You know, and I would not be the least bit surprised
if they build a production version of this.
Obviously not with the suicide doors, but you know,
I can see them taking on Jeep.
But they just do that, it's so cool.
What was that Craig?
They should, cause it would be so cool
to have something different and still functional.
Well, our friend, Mr. Jared Rosenhold over at Carbaz,
I mean, his kind of his headline on this is like,
XRT and N can work together.
And like, I know that some of the N people worked
on this concept.
And so like, if you want a real kind of like,
I mean, not necessarily a Raptor competitor,
but like, you know, something to really go after
like hardcore four runner bros or the Bronco kind of stuff.
Like I think there's room for competition
from the Koreans in that segment,
because if they come in the way that they have
in the other segments, they take this,
they take this crap seriously.
Ford and Jeep will be in big trouble if my face is up.
Well, yeah.
Yeah, and I'm not, I'm not Korean pilled here.
I don't sound like it with my love of the attic 5N,
but like, there are, the domestic automakers
have really been kind of rested on their laurels
on those sorts of products.
You know, we've got a 10 year product cycle on Wrangler,
which looks like it's probably gonna be about the case now.
So, you know, next year,
we'll probably start seeing some concepts,
but for whatever it is, the JM or whatever,
they're gonna end up calling it, you know, Broncos.
I mean, it's closing in sales-wise on Wrangler,
but both of those products are really expensive.
I mean, part of the Wrangler's problem
is it's how much the dang thing costs.
Look at full-size trucks, they're absolutely insane.
Yeah.
So like, if you could get something like,
it won't look like this concept, I understand that,
but like, if you could get something,
RAV4 4Runner-ish, 4Runner's kind of big now,
but like, you know, a Santa Fe kind of sized
or whatever, that's really kind of like a,
like a Broncos sport, but more Bronco-y.
Yeah.
I think they were, yeah, I agree.
I think they'd be in trouble.
Yeah.
Yeah, it'll be interesting to see them
build something like this.
All right, so the, let's see what we got next.
Oh, let's go with Honda Prelude pricing.
You know, I got to drive the Prelude
a few weeks ago in Japan.
And Prelude's-
It's not Prelude.
Yes.
And they've now officially announced the pricing
for the US, $43,195 delivered,
which is not cheap, but you know,
it kind of falls midway between a Civic Hybrid Sport Touring
and the Type R, you know, and it's got-
That's about what I would have expected
for a car like this.
Yeah, you know.
Yeah, that's what I was figuring.
You know, the Type R is up to about 47 now.
But I think it's like three grand too expensive.
Yeah, I mean, it would, I would prefer it to be cheaper,
but you know, it does have all the Type R suspension
and brakes, it's got the S Plus shifting stuff.
You know, it's actually surprising amount of fun to drive.
Yeah, and one of the things that, you know,
that as soon as they announced
that they were putting the Type R suspension
and brakes on there, I figured,
oh man, at some point they've got to build a prelude Type R,
you know, just drop the turbo two liter in there.
And you know, Honda has been avoiding that question.
They prefer not to talk about that question.
Just like 35 something that recon.
Yeah.
But you know, we might as well address a listener comment
that actually came in on a Discord switch,
which is an interesting thing here.
Jeff D in the Discord said,
whenever I think of Acura Integra,
I almost think of the OG three door Integra
from the mid to late 80s,
as opposed to the five door that we have today.
And says, I almost bought one,
got an Azuzu impulse turbo instead.
It would be really cool if Acura made
a three door Integra based on the prelude.
And that actually would be really interesting.
Take the pre, you know,
cause the prelude is a shorter wheel base than the Civic.
You know, basically, you know, re-skin that.
And you know, you've already got all the good suspension
brake bits from the Integra Type S
and just put the Integra Type S powertrain in there,
you know, which is the Civic Type R.
You know, and you know, then sell that for,
you know, 48, 49 grand, you know,
so make that a three door Integra.
What do you think about that approach?
Here's, here's, here's a whole lot.
So I like this idea, and I would almost argue
that this is how the car should have come.
It shouldn't have been a prelude.
I also will admit that I think the prelude
is a car designed exactly to my sensibilities,
which means it's probably not for a lot of people.
I appreciate that they built the prelude
because they can, and not because it makes sense
on a balance sheet.
So like, I've always liked what Honda has done that.
I had an S2000, that made no sense at all, financially.
But still one of the best cars I've ever driven.
So I like that part of it.
The prelude was always the two door cord.
And now it's the two door Civic.
I get cars have gotten bigger,
so maybe that makes kind of more sense there,
but preludes are really weird sell
because you're right, it is three grand,
four grand away from a Type R.
If you can find a Type R at Sticker, which you can't,
though I did see a $65,000 prelude over the weekend
because with the dealer markup and everything.
So, excuse me.
You mean Type R, $65,000?
No, a prelude.
Oh, you already saw it at the dealer?
Yeah, I saw it on the internet,
but yeah, it was 10 grand in markup.
That's nuts.
I mean, I like the prelude a lot.
I would not pay that kind of money for it.
$400 for a screen protector for the infotainment screen.
Get lost. $300 to fill the tires with nitrogen.
Yeah, it was total rip off city.
But I think that you maybe wouldn't have gotten
the Integra Type S if the prelude would have been,
if the Integra would have been the prelude.
But I think the Integra,
I think the prelude is trying to be a premium product.
And I think it'd fit better with an Acura badge.
I mean, I know that doesn't have power adjustable seats
and stuff like that, but add those,
add a couple of grand to the price
if you need to slap an Acura badge on it.
And I think that makes a little bit more sense
than it does with a Honda badge.
Yeah, an Integra Type S is $53,400.
So, you know.
US only, by the way.
Yeah, I know.
We're North America only.
So, if you could do an Integra,
an Acura prelude Type S for under 50 grand,
I think that would sell a lot better,
I think, than a prelude.
I can't believe the Type S is 55 grand for the Integra.
That's just insane.
Well, they had to put some differentiation.
But I mean, that puts you in like,
that puts you in two, three, five-eye money.
You know, like, that gets it.
But probably a lot more reliable than a BMW.
Sure, yeah, the same with whatever,
you know, the Mercedes or whatever off-frame.
But, you know, and they drive well
for front-wheel drive cars, things like that, but I don't.
But 55 grand, and that's just the starting price, right?
With, I mean, that's with delivery, of course,
but you shouldn't include because you have to pay that anyway.
But there's a paint color.
I think the only real cost is the paint color
on the Integra.
Yeah, everything else is pretty much standard on there.
Well, that's good.
But a two-door coupe, I mean, you know,
to your Discord comment, like, nobody buys those.
Like, I would.
And Honda doesn't expect to sell a whole lot of them.
But because, you know, it's sharing, you know,
so many parts with, you know, the Civic and other Honda vehicles,
you know, other vehicles are on that same platform.
There's a lot of common componentry on there.
So the actual cost, you know, to produce this, you know,
there's not a lot of unique stuff to this.
You know, they can do it.
And that's, you know, I mean,
that's why it's $43,000 for the Prelude.
You know, because there is some cost,
but it's not, you know,
it's not like they're developing a completely unique platform.
Right.
Well, so I don't think that they would offer a two-door
and a four-door Integra that are as different
as what I think they would be if they did it with this stuff.
But my question for you, Sam, since you've driven it,
is is it a more expensive, fancier,
more funded drive Civic Hybrid
or is it a detuned, more fuel efficient Civic Type R?
It works the Prelude.
It's both of those.
Yes.
You know, because it has the driving dynamics
of a Civic Type R, because it's got that suspension,
you know, you can, you can, you know,
going into a corner, you can trail brake it
and, you know, bring that back end around really nicely,
you know, and balance it perfectly, you know.
And at the same time, you've got, you know,
that you've got that Civic Hybrid powertrain in there,
which is really, really good.
And, you know, you've got, as, you know,
we talked about with the Ionic 5N, the Ionic 6N,
you've got that fake shifting, the simulated shifting
and the engine sounds and everything, you know.
And as with the Hyundai, you know,
it feels very authentic.
And a lot, a big part of the reason why,
why they're able to do that is because
of the way the Honda Hybrid system works,
which is in a lot of ways quite different
from the Toyota Hybrid system, you know,
because it is actually predominantly electric drive.
You know, it's more series hybrid
than parallel hybrid most of the time.
And so it, you know, that, you know,
because the engine is mostly decoupled
from driving the vehicle under the vast majority
of driving conditions, even when you're driving
quickly on a track, you know,
because, you know, you've got 181 horsepower
from the primary electric motor, you know,
out of 200 total.
The- It's a good amount.
Yeah, you know, so you're getting most
of the electric drive, so that gives them the freedom
to actually manage the engine revs
and make it feel like, you know, like, you know,
actually have it cycling up and down
as you're shifting and also do the torque management
as the electric motor, you know,
so you get that little, you know, slight drop
in propulsion as it's doing the shifts.
So it has that same very authentic feel
that the Hyundai's have.
So it does not feel like the old insight,
because with the old insight, like,
No, just the rev, no, not really,
no matter what your foot was doing.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
So but, but to also be clear, like,
it's the computers choosing to raise engine revs
sort of independent of efficiency
for the purpose of-
Yeah, when you put it in S-plus mode, yeah,
it's managing the engine based on things
your speed, your lateral acceleration, your yaw rate. So using all of those inertial motion
sensor signals to replicate what the engine would be doing if you were driving just a pure
internal combustion vehicle and shifting it manually. But it's way more sophisticated than,
let's say, a CV Tiggy with fake shifts. Yes. Yeah, absolutely. Nice.
Yeah, I want to drive it. I'm looking forward to it. I think, like I said, I think it might be a car
designed for me in a lot of ways. But yeah, I also, you know, I don't know, when the price
came out, there's a lot of people that said this product was going to be DLA. It's not the recon.
It's not, no, it's not the recon. I think this would be a lot more appealing than the recon.
And yeah, it's not inexpensive. But again, you know, when you look at it in the context of what
else is out there, you compare it to the Civic Hybrid and the Type R, you know, it's right in
between those. You know, so you've got kind of the best of both worlds and a different design, that
two-door form factor. So it's got, you know, it's kind of in a unique place. And there's nothing
else quite like it in the market, you know. Well, because I think it doesn't make sense.
Like, I think it makes sense for like what they're trying to do. Yeah. But I don't think
it makes sense to a bean counter. Yeah. And well, no, I think, I don't think Honda would do it if it
didn't, if it didn't make financial sense for them. You know, I think, I think they understand the
kinds of volumes that you're going to get with this, which is probably no more than 10 or 15,000
units a year in the US. Right. You know, which I bet it's lower than that. I bet after the
first year, it's maybe 10. Yeah, after the first year, it'll probably drop off a bit. But if
they made it a prelude SUV, then they could sell 50,000 of them. Oh yeah, absolutely.
Or a prelude SI and put the civic type origin. I don't know. I think there's ways to go with it.
But I do feel like this was a car that they could build because they can.
Wait, it's pronounced SI. I've been saying it as C. I thought it was a Spanish market model.
C, Craig. C. I've been saying it wrong this whole time. What?
It said, dang it. Dang it anyhow. All right, C. Let's carry on. The Porsche Cayenne Electric.
They appreciate your courtesy laughter, by the way, for that terrible joke.
The Cayenne Electric is now officially out. It's here. Yeah. Yeah. $111,000.
Yeah, the launch mode. Yeah. 400 kilowatt charging, 10 to 80 percent in less than 16 minutes if you
can find a charger that actually works that fast. Iona's got 400 kilowatt chargers.
They do. They do, and they're pretty reliable from what I've used.
So and you know if you're too lazy to plug in when you pull into your garage
They also offer a wireless charging system for they do which this is the first like mainstream application in North America
I believe yeah, BMW did a pilot. They sold a limited number of five series plug-in hybrids some years back
there was
Genesis when they launched the GV 60 in Korea
It was available and I don't know if it still is but it was available at the time with a wireless charging system
This is a lot because um system. Yeah, because our friends that my friends at telemetry
Made a connection to electricity for the old EV pulse test. Yeah
Why disclosure disclosure alert? I know people at telemetry. So does Sam oddly enough?
I think yeah, yeah, one of his paychecks wait, I know Sam disclose full disclosure. I guess Sam outside of this podcast
Um, what do you guys think of the styling of this thing though? I think it's pretty sharp
Still looks like it kind of years. I really want to try that interior folded screen thing
I think it's probably gonna be silly. I think it's probably gonna be silly, but I still want to try it to see
Here I don't think automakers realize
They're so eager to go all in on this on screens everywhere, but I don't think they realize how dated and tacky that's gonna look
In like ten years like five is this portion need so many displays like you don't you don't need that
Nobody's asking for a climate control display like literally nobody. I don't even think passengers need to display honestly cuz they've got
But I feel like I'm in JJ. I feel like I'm in JJ Abrams and Star Trek universe though
And I'm in something with all the curved displays and stuff, you know
Not the original series which had all of the the tactile buttons and discs and stuff like that
But that JJ Abrams reboot lens flare and oh boy, that's that's kind of the vibe that I get
I think Portion's bigger problem is they're having a real hard time selling EVs at least in North America
The one is not selling as well, right?
And they're very good EVs. Yeah. Well, actually the McCann about one-third of McCann sales now are EVs
Even in the US. Yeah
Okay
Him a few weeks ago, that's what he said. Yeah, it's about one-third EVs now. Hi, Cal
But I want to drive your for your Porsche's again banks
The the base Cayenne electric makes do with a mere 402 horsepower
That turbo
1139 with with launch control
Something like Cal wants to tell me it's something like 99% of Porsche buyers
Have a the ability to a garage. Oh, yeah a workplace for charging. So yeah, I mean they're they're more
Customers, yeah, they're yeah, so so the whole qualifications that we talked about earlier for for plug-and-hybrid stuff like that
Like those those are typically solved here
Like a 9-11 turbo s customer living in their car
No, no, um, but I think that like I
Think it makes sense. I don't understand why
more really rich people don't buy EVs because like they're still better
Like unless you're buying like a collectible or a fun car weekend car kind of thing
Like your thing to take your kids back and forth to private school. Give me a car and electric to do that like
It'll be excellent. I mean, it'll probably be excellent or good, you know
I would say give me an Audi, but I don't can't think there's a single Audi. I like right now, but um
Yeah, I
Well, I mean the Q6 e-tron is built on the same PPE architecture
So, you know, if you yeah, if you like this one, you know, the Q6 is gonna be pretty similar
Right
Yeah, it looks nice about the the wire was charging system the the transmitter pad that goes on the floor
Everything for that is actually contained within that pad
So all you have coming off of that is a cord that you plug it in
Everything out. There's no wall box required for it. Oh, wow. That's cool. It's all contained within that pad
So you just find your your 1450 outlet plug it in. Yep, or does it get hardwired?
I don't know. I would imagine you can I think you can hardwire it too
That's I mean, I don't want to say that's like a game changer because it's on a car here
I mean, not that many people are gonna buy it, but I like the idea wireless charging
I mean even before I had a real good demo of it, but then you know Craig
We did a lot of stuff with electricity and like a lot of it made sense to me
Yeah, I think you know one of the one of the big challenges with the wireless charging still has been the cost
You know like I did a research project with a company probably
Seven or six or seven years ago now
That was working on a wireless charging system. You know and we did we did some costing
analysis for them and
You know at that time
You know even in volume, you know, it was still gonna cost
Somewhere around three to four thousand dollars for all the components, you know the bill materials
And and the assembly cost so you know this and I believe
That you know for the cayenne the system for the cayenne. I think it's like an eight thousand dollar option
Which is kind of nuts, but yeah, I mean if you're spending a lot of money the cayenne is gonna cost
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah, it's either get that or get
leather-wrapped sun visors
Right, it's the same price you get red painted little chicklets on the air fence. Oh, that's four thousand dollars or whatever
Yeah, yeah, I mean if there's there's one thing that Porsche has learned over the years
It's how to separate customers from their money. They're very good at it. They're very good very good at that
Yes, what what what color did you want us to match for that that piece of leather on the the shift knob?
Do any color you want we can absolutely do that we can we can tan that hide whatever color you want, you know, I
Kind of like I mean I kind of like the bespoke stuff though
I like when rolls rice does weird stuff though their gamer thing this past week was kind of weird
But that's not on the rundown, but I think the one thing that Porsche understands that I don't think a lot of automakers do is
They'll take your money. They want your money and and it's it's like well
Well, why BMW and Mercedes understand that pretty well. There's yeah, but like there's been times where you're just like
Well, why don't you offer this feature? Why is this feature only locked this? Why are you making it so hard for me to give you money?
Don't put barriers up between
Giving me your money. I know there's some manufacturing kind of things stuff like that
but like it should not be difficult for me to give you more money if I want to do that and
Some automakers find ways to put barriers that they just doesn't well, I mean one one of the things with
Rolls Royce you mentioned them, you know, they have that
I forget what it's actually what's officially called
But you know, they've got the fiber optic system in the in the headliner, you know shows the night sky
Yes, you got all the stars and one of the things that they will do for customers if they ask is
they will find the
the the sky map of
Any day in history like you know the day you were born anywhere a day you were married day anywhere from any location and they will
They will arrange those little points of light to match the sky on on any day and location
When you when you proposed to your wife and you pointed out that particular star in the sky when you were laying outside
You can have that recreated in your rolls rise. Yeah, and look is it silly? Yes. Is it cool?
Yes, does it take money out if you have a half a million dollars to spend on a Rolls Royce, right?
Who cares if it's silly. Why why not? I
I they they just have a this sort of group of people that just sit around and make stuff up and charge for it
I think it's cool. Yeah, I think it's clever
But like there's a tiny wish I can just a little briefly with the whole Audi Porsche thing
Like you used to be able to get a golf R and like 20 different colors
Yeah, you had to pay three grand for it because they had to pull it from the line and go
Send it over to a different like one of the Porsche lines to finish the paint, but like
Do stuff like that? Yeah
All right, I'm nostalgic
Genesis. Let's talk Genesis
So are we talking like I'll start with the magma GT or sorry. No, actually, let's start with the GV 60 magma
Oh, so you don't want to start like in the beginning. God created having the earth Genesis. No
The Genesis is a car one-day motor group. No wrath of con Genesis
No, not not
60 magma so mag magma. Oh, yes is Genesis is new Genesis Genesis
The performance brand for Genesis
So they're racing their new
Endurance racer sports car race team is Genesis magma racing
They're they're launching
Magma versions of their production models starting with the GV 60 magma, which was also in LA
This is basically an ionic 5n in Genesis clothing and bright orange paint
Yeah, so yeah same 641 horsepower
And all the other goodies
But with you know Genesis styling and and orange paint
I do expect it to be a little bit more tame than the 5n in
Terms of like that kind of raw-edged kind of thing because I feel like a Genesis buyer
It's probably a little too quote-unquote mature
For the ionic 5n's hooliganness. That's sort of what I've been told from people who
Still work there. Yeah, not to give away any because I also knew somebody used to work there as we all talked about earlier
But um, I think it's gonna be maybe a little bit more adult than that
but I still think it's gonna be silly and
It's orange. It's freakin orange. It's a bit hazy house. Oh, it's beautiful. It reminds me of molten rock
But only like over the surface
So mess a magma perhaps. That's what you're saying perhaps. I was going to say lava
But then no, I think it's more of a magma
Magma exactly. Um, I think it's a cool name for a race or for a performance brand. I think it's
You know, we saw I'm a gv-16 magma concept a year or so ago
They've done a couple of magma concepts. They did a g80 magma as well
And and I'm sure that over the next couple of years we'll be seeing
Magma variants of probably most of the the genesis lineup as as they start the race program next year
You know, they're out testing right now
with the gmr 001
And that's going to start competing in March
at the
uh, the
The first world insurance championship race of 2026
Yep
So actually the orange actually reminds me a lot of the orange that was on the amg
Gcxx concept. Um, yeah. Yeah, yeah
But speaking of but speaking of like that like I for the first time in my career
I was able to go to a flotterback earlier this year and um
Um
Like that place is just like it's so focused around about the racing
aspect of Mercedes-Benz as well as as the high performance streetcar kind of stuff and like
Like it's just it's such a thing
And if genesis can tap into like that thing
They're just gonna I mean, I don't say they're gonna print money, but they're gonna
They're gonna open up themselves to customers
And that they haven't had before and they're gonna be able to increase margins and they're gonna just be able to
I think they can really compete with the best from bmwm and from Mercedes-amg
I mean, they've got the resources to do it and I I think they've got the will to do it
So, uh, they have or had elbert bierman
Yeah
I did so, um, you know
Shifting over to france to castel a that the paul ricard racetrack, which is where the genesis magma racing team is based
They had I guess they had an event over there this week
Where they showed off the genesis magma gt concept
A mid-engine sports car
v8 powered
Also very orange
What do you think of this one?
It's cool. It looks fantastic. Yeah
It's like a c8 corvette in a way, but much smoother and more rounded cleaner. It does kind of in some
In some ways, it does remind me again of that amg gtx concept, but I think that's good. I think wind tunnels
You know, I think it's better. I think it's better than the amg. It's a better. Yeah, same. Yeah, same. Um
I don't know. It looks exotic. It looks sporty. It looks fun. It looks like
I don't know if I was initially a big fan of this idea of of genesis looking at the germans
And saying that's what I want to do. I think they have an opportunity to carve out
An entirely different part of the segment. Um, I still think that they could if they wanted to but
If they're going to embrace the germans
They're doing it the right way
When they initially announced the magma products
It was I think at the new york auto show a couple years back
That they were not calling magma a sub brand. Do you guys know if that has changed because I asked them specifically and they're like no
No, no, these are more
Special line of vehicles or something to that. Yeah, I don't I don't think that's like a sub brand, right?
I mean, you know, it's it's all
You know six and one half dozen of the other. Yeah, it doesn't it doesn't really matter
You know if you call it a sub brand or not, you know, it's a
In a way, you know, if they're gonna have
separate models like this, uh
GT
You know, it does make it sort of a sub brand
Of genesis, you know, which in and of itself is already
You know started off as a sub brand of hunday. You know, so
Uh, you know, who knows but
You know, I think I would be surprised if they don't build a car like this in the next few years
Um
Especially, you know, like I said now that they're going into the hypercar class in wack
With that race car, you know, I think that they probably also want to compete in the gt3 class
And this would be a perfect product for them to base a gt3 race car on
Yeah, and and hunday the hunday motor group is so aggressive. Anyway
They have no fear of tackling new segments, right? Yeah, so for them to push into this
Hypercar or whatever you want to call it luxury space
I would not be surprised at all. Well, they have the I mean
They have the money and resources to do it because they're so vertically integrated everywhere else
I mean
A hunday car comes off the line and besan is immediately loaded onto a boat that it's hunday written on the side of it
Like it's made at a hunday shipyard from hunday steel. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's
That power that's a real power literally everything. It's the entire south korean country
Um, so basically that wasn't the only vehicle that genesis showed off in france
Uh, they showed something called the gene g90 wingback
Anything don't do anything but call it a wagon, right? Yeah, so the g90 for those who have forgotten is
hunday's current flagship big luxury sedan
and this is
A wagon
That is based on that platform, but you know the styling has evolved
Um, I love this. I love this car
I'm gonna say something controversial. Yeah, I think it's ugly. Hmm. You're wrong. The back end has a lot going on
I'm fine with that
Yeah, it looks like they let's look like somebody said hey design the back end and they just didn't stop
Yep
There's a weirdness to the roof line too
I don't know, but I'm wrong. I mean, I know I'm wrong. Like I'm fine with being wrong
I'm a wagon person. So I love this. Oh, so no so am I I totally I
I'm tired of concepts
Let's say I'm especially from
Like genesis like they do some production stuff, but man, they love doing
They'd love doing concepts and this isn't one of those
Uh genesis x whatever things so it's probably more likely to make production
but like
Just say you're gonna build the darn car
I I think they are gonna build this one. It will probably never be sold in in north america
Uh, because you know, it's a wagon and you know, we can't have nice things. Exactly. Um, but uh, I think that
You know, I think that this will be sold in europe and and in asia
And um, I I would just I would love to have it here, but we'd probably never get it
Um, instead we'll get something like the grand equator
That they that they showed in new york. Yeah
It's like the we talked about the ford flex earlier. I wish ford would bring that back
Yeah, a lower version on the rear drive whatever it is cd6 architecture like the explorer aviator
Push the roof down a little bit get rid of some of the off-road capability
Add some more style like you had with the original flex
It'd be a fantastic product
Yeah, I have I've a friend that has two flexes in his garage one for him and one for his wife
They're all in on the flex. There's there's several of them in my neighborhood stall. Yeah
Yeah, and they haven't made that thing in years. I know it's been
Two but
Yeah, I I
I like the wagon concept
I think that if we're gonna start talking more about fuel efficiency
Especially like ev efficiency and things like that. I think wagons
Kind of become much more of a viable kind of product offering. Um
You know, but we can't for some
There's no appetite in the united states for a lot of things. I think some of it is
Because the american customers just different
Um, I think I think this time that's that's determined
So much by automakers of what kind of profit margin they want
Like I think for it only wants to build f1 f series trucks. I think that's all I care about. Yeah. Um
You know, so I
I think this car would be a big ask in the us because you're asking somebody to buy a genesis
Which is already a big ask
and then
You're offering a body style that only kind of enthusiasts are really gonna want and how many
Genesis enthusiasts
Are there
Not that many. I don't know. I don't know
Yeah, all right
I think people forget about wagons
And like it's very generational people hated minivans and then because they grew up in a minivan and
I think the next generation of kids is probably gonna have a
I say kids but drivers
Are gonna have a distaste for suvs perhaps because that's what their family had and what they grew up on right
So maybe there's an opportunity for a wagon resurgence in the u.s
And honestly, I hope so too because like as much as I am pro like talking about automotive in the industry and things like that
Bigger heavy vehicles just kill more people. They kill more pedestrians. They you know
Um, you can't see out of them. You can't see you can't see out of them at all. Uh, it's
It's just this this problem that we keep having and I think as especially as cities start to focus more on
Okay, how do we protect bicycles and cycle, you know cyclists and pedestrians and things like that? I think
scvs start to really kind of
fall out of favor
um
I don't know. We'll see
I don't know. We'll see. Yeah. Um
Yeah, all right one one last item for today
Uh, you remember ballinger motors
They're still around. Um, sort of
They sort of they they got they got bought a couple of years back by a company called mullen
Yes, they're still around
kind of sort of
um, you know, and they you know, they largely abandoned the um, the the electric pickup truck and
SUV that they showed, you know, I'm pretty sure that there were only ever the two
Examples that they built one pickup one SUV. I'm pretty sure there were there was never a second of either one of those ever built
um
And you know, it was kind of it was kind of a you know a unique design, you know very boxy
Uh, it had a full pass through from the bed all the way through the cab, you know into the front trunk
Uh for for long items, you know
And you know a lot of people got really excited by this thing
Um, but they never raised the money to be able to build it
But they had also developed a medium duty electric medium duty truck chassis
Which is what mullen was trying to get to yeah production
uh, well
apparently
According to the the Detroit free press
Uh, the the company has stopped paying its bills
Um, and employees are saying that they haven't been paid in weeks
Um
And uh the the coo sent an email to employees in late october explaining that they were unable to make payroll
So that's almost a month ago now
Follow-up messages a week later indicated the problem had still not been resolved meaning employees have now gone unpaid for more than six weeks
the problem
And uh, they've also stopped paying their their suppliers and vendors and stuff
Um, so my guess is that uh, mullen is our
Bollinger is probably gonna be
Finally done for good
Is anyone surprised? I mean no no so before the mullen acquisition
I was doing a lot of work with the truck trend and um
All of our friends and assuming all of our friends. Um, this miss valentine was representing
Bollinger, I won't say her last name on here, but she was wrapping bull blinger with her agency. Um,
so she put me in front of mr. Bollinger several times for interviews and um
He never really had a lot of great answers
To to to like certain questions like
I think the vehicle the truck and the scba. I think they were interesting, you know
We're going to the moon retro sci-fi kind of way
Um
But they're also really kind of lacked sort of any sort of design cohesiveness things like that
But they were really leaning kind of on maybe an old school late or not an old school Andrew cruiser
But like an old school
Defender
Defender kind of vibe, um
Which is now kind of filled a bit by inios though
I've heard they've been having a little problems too
Perfect potentially but like it just it was just like who's this
for where it wasn't
Set by anything else like who you know, that wasn't the questions were being answered by other automakers already in that kind of EV space
um
The pivot the moment pivot to commercial
I think makes a lot of sense because I think electrification in commercial makes a lot of sense
Even if some of the people have pulled back from it
I've just seen so much good stuff and I've talked to enough people that a lot of the apprehension
Of switching to EVs in commercial trucking and things like that is less about
Will the save us money or will the save us a maintenance the apprehension is still that
All EVs are woke kind of thing like if you get over that if you get kind of over that hurdle
I think there's a lot of things that make sense and looking at um the drive article that you shared in the rundown
um
That kind of broke down the mullin truck like, you know, it was using Dana for axels, which I think is is a good idea
um, oh any which I think is still a great concept of a company even though they
Fired their cvo and brought their ceo back and and is that like a concept of a plan? It's a concept of yeah
Yeah, but like it was it but like I liked what they're doing and they've been having trouble and
it's
just so
It if mainstream automakers
Can't figure it out
What hope do you kind of have as a startup? I I know it's a very
And you know this does not bode well for for slight either, you know, and I think no, no, they have slights gonna have the money though
They they have bezos money. Well, some bezos, you know, I think they also have the wrong form factor for their vehicle
Yeah, like I think there's again like the prelude like
I think for the right customer
I just don't think there's a lot of right customers and
In the case of like a prelude sure honda doesn't need to make a bunch of cars because they make
Crescent and things like that. Um, I was just explaining to one of our gm friends recently saying I'm on around that trip to new york
Like I think slate like if gm would introduce a slate kind of vehicle
I think that could do reasonably well for them because they don't need to bet the entire company on one product
Bolinger had to bet his entire company
On this one or two products that aren't necessarily built for a large
audience and the slate the slate customers also not the total adjustable market of a slate customer is pretty small
Yeah, I don't know how you make a car company
Work off of that a brand or a sub brand sure
whole company
Maybe they never intended to succeed
Perhaps it was just a cash grab and this sounds super cynical. Perhaps it was just a cash grab when you know government subsidies are being offered
It's a way to get
Money, I don't know for slate or for bologna for both for any any like start-up niche EV maker. I think
Well, I even have like I'm much more optimistic about scout
But I still have questions. I mean one of our one of our colleagues has said like she's like well
What happens after what else can they offer they can offer a truck from an SUV
And they can offer in larger sizes and smaller sizes and like that's kind of it like is that enough
To sustain because you can't have a scout sedan, you know, um, not that sedans are popular or not, but like
what's the
What's the an outback size, you know an outback style wagon?
Yeah, yeah, I mean can you I mean maybe you can do that and again, I think scouts at a much better place
Yeah, you know and you know scout is you know part of the vw group
Um, and you know, there's already some
No, well, I mean they're a hundred percent owned by Volkswagen AG
So they're they're part of the but they're not Volkswagen but they're not Volkswagen AG though
No, but they are and they are an independent entity, right?
They just happen to have gotten all of their money. Yeah, and and it's owned by Volkswagen AG
So, you know, it's a separate business site though, huh?
But it's not on their website as a as an owned by it. I'm splitting hairs. I'm sorry
I mean it's practical purposes. They are owned by Volkswagen AG just like
Um, electrify america is owned by Volkswagen AG. It's a separate business unit
But you know, so it's technically a separate business entity. It's a separate company
But 100 of the shares are owned by Volkswagen
So, you know, it is technically part of the the company
Um
And
So, you know in in that case, you know, they are going to be using components from other Volkswagen group
Units, uh, like the the range extender engines are going to come from the Volkswagen group
their
EE architecture is going to come from the Volkswagen Rivian joint venture and the software platform is coming from there
Um, and you know, there were some recent reports that Audi is looking to build an suv of their own
Based on the scout platform
So, you know, you know, I think that they're they're more part of the group than they aren't
Yeah, yeah, I think so that helps there
But you know the it does but you know
From you know for for a long time. I've actually been
Skeptical of the prospects for scout because as you said, you know
Okay, what once you've done the pickup and the suv then where do you go from there?
And how many of those are they really going to sell?
You know, especially given, you know, what we now know about the market for
Electric large pickup trucks, you know, which is a lot smaller than people thought it was
Uh, yeah, so I think I think it's you know, they're going to have a tough time
You know in a couple years ago. I was on auto line after hours with John McElroy
You know, and I think you know was asked, you know, what I thought about prospects for scout
And I you know, I gave it at that time. I gave it a 50 50 chance of ever getting to production
Uh-huh
And I'm not sure that it's much better than that now
Yeah, I think I
I would probably give a
closer to 60 or 70 I think
Um, maybe because I'm just being a little optimistic. Um
But I think most of their volume will be in
They need to get the suv right. Yeah, um
I mean, they need to get both right, but I think the suv is definitely something they need to get right and um
You know, we still don't know what the range of standard engines are going to be
It's probably going to be some version of that 80 80 80 80 81
But something like 90 percent there was a number that came out that said we're ordered as the e-rev
Yeah, every 85 percent, but yeah, it's the vast majority. So like that's both a good and a bad sign
I mean, it's a good sign because they know how many engines they need
But it's like a bad sign for like the long term kind of plans of
like scout
But I like the scouts thumb in the nose to Volkswagen dealers because
dealers are
Can be problematic
They might not be the best partners. Yeah, just in case you have any dealers listening
Sometimes you guys aren't the best partners the automakers. You mean a 10,000 customers on a
Type r right sometimes sometimes y'all are
but
there's there's bad apples out there and
You know, I kind of see why I can kind of see why scouts like
EVs dealers tend to not like EVs. So let's
let's
Figure this out, you know in a separate sort of way
but like
If Sam if you're 50% on scout, you've got to be like what 30% on slate. Yeah about that
Yeah, you know, I think
I
I like the idea of what slate wants to do
And I I would be I would be much more positive on them if they had chosen a different form factor
If they had done a four-door
Crew cab pickup, yeah, then I would have been much more positive on their prospects
But with a two-door, I just don't see it
Selling beyond except for fleets, you know, like there's a lot of fleets that they'd buy ford mavericks
Because they're they're cheap simple, you know good good delivery vehicles and stuff like that
I I do not see, you know, and I think that's the same customer for the slate
For some local deliveries things like that, you know delivering auto parts
But we're gonna find out I don't see most
You know, there's you know a very small niche of consumers that want a vehicle like that
But it's a small small niche
We're going to find out that if a car a car company
Started that had an idea based entirely on the internet comment section. Can that be successful?
um, yeah
And I don't know because you go into the comment section. I covered
I mean before Craig and I worked a lot on EV. It's like I spent a lot of time talking about trucks
And the comments were non-stop. I want something basic. Give me a two-door basic
Whatever like just that's what I want. The trucks are too expensive
You can go buy a regular cam truck now and nobody does
Yeah, well, I think there's some self-fulfilling prophecy there with what dealers stock and what manufacturers sure
But if you wanted one, you can get one
You'll just have to order it probably but I think that's but I think that um
Like slate's gonna be they're using somebody else to use this as money. Thank goodness to answer this question
but
This is an internet design truck like this is bare bones basic cheap intentionally cheap will probably feel cheap
Um, I think people want less expensive vehicles, but I don't I don't think many of them want to feel like
They're poor
But I don't think you want to be reminded that you're poor when you drive your car
Not there's anything wrong with being poor. I'm poor, but like there's there's what
And I think that the stuff that I've seen from the slate so far
has been
cheap for the sake of being like
really cheap like creaking doors and
Fit and finish and stuff like they're gonna have to get that even if the car is cheap. They're gonna have to get stuff like that, right and
I know we're still a ways away yet from potentially seeing the production car, but
The total adjustable market
Tiny yeah, because I think a four door I think a four door would have made potentially more sense
I think that you know, I think there's choices that they've made
But if it's sub $30,000 as an EV without incentives
But you can get a Nissan Leaf
And it's so good and the leak
It's so good and the Leaf's got 300 miles of range and it's a it is a really good vehicle
Yeah, yeah, I mean people are getting out of the 260 mile version. They're getting 300 miles out of that
Yeah, so like the 30 grand one that's
We'll probably be closer to 320 330 on range like
And it seats five yeah, and it has a hatch
you know
It I don't make it
Yeah
Yeah, all right. Well, thank you gentlemen for joining me today and filling in
Always good to talk to you guys and uh, we'll talk to everybody next time. Bye
Bye see ya
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About this episode
The episode dives into the latest developments in the automotive world, featuring discussions on the EV Pulse Reunion, the new Genesis Magma performance brand, and the Genesis GV 60 Magma. The hosts critique the design and market viability of various electric vehicles, including the Bollinger Motors situation and the challenges faced by startups in the EV space. They also explore the potential for wagons to make a comeback in the U.S. market, while reflecting on the future of electric vehicles and the importance of design and consumer appeal.
This week both Robbie and Nicole are on vacation so Craig Cole is back along with Chad Kirchner. Sam had the Lucid Gravity Grand Touring.
Ahead of the LA Auto Show, Lucid also announced the more affordable Touring trim that starts just under $80,000. Jeep has revealed all the details of its first electric off-roader and lets just say we're not sure who is going to buy it. Hyundai showed the production version of the Ioniq 6 N and the new Crater off-road concept that could challenge the Wrangler and Bronco. We have pricing on the new Honda Prelude and details of the new Porsche Cayenne Electric. Genesis has revealed the GV60 Magma performance EV, the G90 Wingback wagon and Magma GT concept. Bollinger has stopped paying its bills.
You can help out the many people that are food insecure this holiday season by donating to Feeding America and Robbie will write and record a song for you or at your local food bank. There are also dogs in need of assistance and Sam will be joining a crew of volunteers helping to transport them to forever homes in December and you can help by donating to Operation Frodo. Links are below.