Riviandog
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2021
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 75
- Reaction score
- 85
- Location
- California
- Vehicles
- Tesla model s , model y
- Occupation
- RF Engineer
I think those points are valid albeit very speculative. I'm basing my opinions, just that, on what has transpired in the past 4+ years of waiting. I should clarify that max pack and 4-motor is the config that was marketed. DOWNGRADING to a dual motor and vocalizing future visions of a 800V battery pack is smoke and mirrors to detract to the REAL issue. Keeping your promise to Max pack adventure res holders would be too much of a loss.The optimist in me thinks this isn't the case. GM is bringing out 2 400+ mile trucks and supposedly the Cybertruck is still coming with similar range. Rivian will need to have max pack to compete with them. As far as development challenges, there's good reason to assume Rivian doesn't want to release a 400V truck with a 180 kWh pack due to slower charging times. If you look at the Hummer EV, it's capable of 350 kW charging with a 212 kWh battery. Being limited to 220 kW for a very short period of time wouldn't be great when at least the GM offerings will be 800V and over 300 kW. We also know that Rivian plans to release the Dual Motor + Max Pack configuration by summer 2023, which means 800V and in-house Enduro motors. We also know from past quarterly investor calls that Rivian has been testing the Enduro motors / drive units for around six months now in the EDVs in a single motor configuration. So it's probably safe to assume they don't have any two motor Enduro drive units in testing yet, given the new 2024 timeline. If they announce more details on the Dual Motor Max Pack truck and it happens to have a locker at least in the rear, I'd consider trying to change to that configuration if it meant getting a truck sooner. But given that I want max pack to tow, I'm not currently willing to drop back to a large pack.
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