JBee
Well-known member
- First Name
- JB
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2019
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- 18
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- Location
- Australia
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck
- Occupation
- . Professional Hobbyist
Yeah I just don't think Porshe is a good comparison for the CT.]
Maybe, like they Plaid, the offer a >$20K track package to fix some of the ways in which it’s not a sports car
Now you’re at $140K for a truck that stops more like a sports car, but still likely isn’t remotely dialed in suspension-wise for being thrown around corners etc
If we’re comparing prices of the resulting CT, the seemingly more relevant “sports car” would be another straight-line drag car, like the 2023 Dodge Challenger SRT Demon 170 … MSRP $100K and a good clip faster than the CT
I mean even the Plaid has its limits even with the new track brakes. One hot lap of Nurburgring is one thing, but being able to do two is quite something else for an EV.
This is where physics becomes reality.
The whole method of Teslas to achieve "peak performance" is predicated on the ability of both electric motors and batteries ability to provide peak power for short periods of time, until both the "underrated" motor and battery get warm and they have to thermal throttle to stop things from melting.
Teslas power envelope exists only until everything starts to overheat.
This is simply the difference between "rated power" and "peak power".
Tesla is not using +300HP "rated" motors, it's only using 300HP "peak" motors. That is why they are good for under 10 second quater miles, but get increasingly worse over longer periods of maximum output. Just like brake fade, just in reverse.
This is not a slight on EV's, rather just a reminder that pushing the limits for seconds, is not the same as sustaining those power levels for hours. This level of performance comes at a cost, and that needs to be paid, both in physics and in the cost of engineering it into a machine.
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