2kwik4u
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Michael
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2025
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 833
- Reaction score
- 1,080
- Location
- Western NY State
- Vehicles
- 2024 Rivian R1T ; 2018 Nissan Rogue
I'll agree pretty strong with this.So 3.04 vs 3.4, those don't seem like big numbers, but in 0-60 time, that's a pretty big difference. The dual performance would suffer significantly so long as the tri is in sport mode. Ultimately, both vehicles are way more than anyone needs out of a daily driver, and the dual performance is still putting up 0-60 numbers that best my wife's i4M50, so it's nothing to sneeze at.
As someone who had a Gen 1 quad, and now a tri, I can say that even comparing those two, the tri feels substantially faster. I think the rear power bias makes a fast car much more fun to drive and that's the primary reason.
The larger difference between a Dual and a Tri/Quad is over 50mph. The Dual falls on it's face pretty badly above 60mph. The Quad and Tri pull like freight trains all the way up to the limiter.
With that said, I put a car length on a BMW M3 Competition this morning to ~60mph in my non-performance dual motor R1T. I caught a good light and he didn't. I was a car and a half ahead at 40, but the was coming on really strong and came by my fast enough to damn near pull the paint off the truck at about 70mph. Supposedly the same 0-60 time as my truck, but launching on the street is much harder in his car than my truck. If I had been in a tri or quad motor I likely would have held him off to the limiter. That extra HP in those trucks is really noticeable on the top end, the instant torque, heavy weight, and strong traction really make any of these trucks brutal off the line.
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