American EV automaker Lucid Motors($LCID) has officially debuted the latest variant available in its flagship SUV model. The Lucid Gravity Touring has officially launched this morning ahead of a public debut at the 2025 Los Angeles International Auto Show. Initial deliveries are set to begin sooner than you’d think. Be sure to check out the b-roll footage below.
Even after its long-anticipated launch, the Lucid Gravity SUV has been a hot topic of discussion, and much of the American automaker’s future still relies heavily on its success in order to reach its third flagship model, codenamed “Mid-size,” which promises to be its most affordable to date.
So far, Gravity has been off to a rollercoaster of a start. Orders opened in October of 2024 with the Grand Touring variant, to be followed by the Touring trim that launched today. Gravity Grand Touring deliveries were temporalily halted in early 2025 before resuming in March. By August, it had reportedly only sold a number of the SUVs in the “three digit range.”
However, a number of vehicles were delivered to Saudi Arabia, and Lucid announced a major robotaxi project with Uber and Nuro that will include at least 20,000 Gravity vehicles, beginning early next year. By fall, Lucid announced it would extend the expired federal EV tax credit itself because of the massive backlog of Gravity orders.
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Due to that demand, no discounts are available any longer, but production of the Gravity Grand Touring and soon, the Touring appears to be ramping up at Lucid’s production facility in Casa Grande, Arizona. Today, during the LA Auto Show, Lucid debuted the Gravity Grand Touring to the public ahead of customer deliveries.
Source: Lucid Motors
Lucid Motors shared a press release following the public debut of the Gravity Touring SUV at Automobility LA 2025 – marking the trim’s official launch which includes a start of customer orders and immediate deliveries “for certain configurations.”
As initially promised, the Lucid Gravity Touring starts below $80,000 at an MSRP of $79,900 – a notable price drop from the current top tier Grand Touring trim, which starts at an MSRP of $94,900. Still, it remains one of the more expensive all-electric SUVs on the market, but also one of the most luxurious and spacious, with range and performance to boot. We’ve included the Touring’s specs below, but first, a quote from Lucid’s interim CEO, Marc Winterhoff:
The Lucid Gravity Touring unlocks a new audience for the Lucid brand in the broad and critical SUV segment. There’s not another SUV in its segment that can deliver the combination of range, interior space, and driving performance found in the Lucid Gravity Touring.
Lucid Gravity Touring Key Specs
Powetrain: Dual Permanent-Magnet Electric Motors (AWD)
Power: 560 bhp
Torque: 811 lb-ft
Battery Capacity: 89 kWh
Platform architecture: 700V+
Charging Port: NACS (native)
DC Charge Power
1,000V charging architecture: Up to 300 kW
500V charging architecture: Boost charging up to 225 kW
EPA-Estimated Range: 337 miles
0-60 mph Acceleration: 4 seconds
Seating Configurations: Two rows – five passengers or three rows – seven passengers
Cargo Volume – Trunk (two-row / three-row): 111.9 cu ft / 106.2 cu ft
Total Cargo Volume – Trunk + Frunk (two-row / three-row): 120.0 cu ft/ 114.3 cu ft
According to Lucid Motors, the Gravity Touring’s platform architecure enables it to recharge up to 200 miles of range in 15 minutes (at 300 kW on a 1,000V DCFC). The company also explained charge rates at Tesla Superchargers, as the Gravity’s NACS port enables access to over 25,000 in the US:
When connected to a Tesla Supercharger, Lucid Gravity Touring can charge at up to 220 kW thanks to Lucid’s proprietary rear motor drive unit boost charging capability, which boosts the 500V station voltage to match the high voltage of the Lucid battery pack.
In addition to the specs mentioned above, the latest Lucid Gravity configuration arrives complete with Clearview Cockpit, Lucid UX 3.0 and the option to upgrade to the automaker’s ADAS DreamDrive 2 Pro system with 32 onboard sensors.
As mentioned above, the Lucie Gravity Touring is available to order now at Lucid’s website. If you’re attending the LA Auto Show, it will be on display November 21-30. As promised, here’s video footage of the new Touring provided by Lucid.
Source: Lucid Motors
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Texas-based tuning firm Vigilante 4×4 is known for its wild, high-horsepower Jeep SJ Hemi restomods – but they’re more than just a hot rod shop. To prove it, they’ve developed a bespoke, all-electric skateboard chassis designed to turn the classic Jeep Grand Wagoneer into a modern, desirable electric SUV.
The scope of the Vigilante 4×4 electric chassis project is truly impressive. More than just a Jeep SJ frame with an electric drive train bolted in, the chassis is a completely fresh design that utilizes precise 3D scans of the original SJ Wagoneers, Grand Wagoneers, and J-Trucks to establish hard points, then fitted with low-slung battery packs to give the electric restomods superior weight balance, a lower center of gravity, and objectively improved ride and handling compared to its classic, ICE-powered forefathers.
The result is a purpose-built platform that delivers power to the wheels through a dual-motor system – one mounted in the front, and one at the rear – to provide a permanent, infinitely variable four-wheel drive system that offers both on-road performance and the kind of off-road capability that made the Grand Wagoneer famous in the first place.
Vigilante 4×4 electric Jeep SJ
“This isn’t a replacement for our Vigilante HEMI offerings,” reads the official copy. “It’s a total revisit of the Vigilante platform under electric power.”
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The company emphasizes that its new chassis is still in the prototype stages. As such, there are no specs, there is no pricing, there are no range estimates. Despite it all, the response from Jeep enthusiasts has already been strong. “Keep in mind this is our first prototype,” a spokesperson said. “There’s still a lot of work to be done – but the journey has begun.”
Electrek’s Take
Electric SJ chassis; Vigilante 4×4.
Retro done wrong – think the Dodge Charger Daytona EV or VW ID.Buzz – is a disaster. Always. If that nostalgic tone is just a little bit off, the song doesn’t work. The heartstrings don’t pull. Done right, however, the siren song of nostalgia will have you putting a second mortgage on your house to put a Singer Porsche or ICON Bronco in your garage.
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EQORE, a distributed battery storage startup based in Somerville, Massachusetts, has raised $1.7 million in seed funding to help industrial buildings tackle rising electricity costs. The round was oversubscribed and includes backing from the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC), Henry Ford III of Ford Motor Company, and Jonathan Kraft of The Kraft Group.
The timing couldn’t be more relevant. Data centers are booming, and that demand is slamming an already stressed grid. Big, utility-scale batteries help at the grid level, but they can’t fix the bottlenecks happening on local distribution networks. That’s where onsite storage steps in — storing energy when demand is low and discharging it when demand spikes, which helps stabilize costs for both the grid and the businesses using it.
MassCEC’s head of investments, Susan Stewart, said, “What excites us the most about EQORE’s technology is the dual impact: grid support and customer savings.” She noted that commercial and industrial buildings are ideal hosts for battery storage, but haven’t gotten much attention until now. “EQORE is closing that gap.”
Investor Randolph Mann highlighted what makes the company stand out: “By uniting advanced controls with high‑resolution metering and true end‑to‑end service, EQORE finally makes commercial behind-the-meter storage effortless and financially compelling for businesses.”
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EQORE comes out of MIT’s Sandbox program and delta v accelerator and is currently part of the Harvard Climate Entrepreneurs Circle incubator. CEO and cofounder Valeriia Tyshchenko, a third‑generation engineer from Ukraine and MIT graduate, said the new funding will help the company scale alongside its existing revenue.
With the seed round closed, EQORE plans to grow its team and ramp up battery deployments at energy-intensive manufacturing facilities. The company doesn’t just install batteries; it operates them. Its autonomous software shifts when a facility uses power based on market conditions and utility incentives, reshaping load in real-time without disrupting operations.
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Hyundai took the sheets of its new off-road electric SUV, the Crater Concept, at the LA Auto Show. Here’s our first look at the compact off-roader.
Meet Hyundai’s new off-road SUV, the Crater Concept
We knew it was coming after Hyundai teased the off-road SUV earlier this week, hidden under a drape. Hyundai took the sheets off the Crater Concept at the LA Auto Show on Thursday, giving us our first real look at the rugged off-roader.
Hyundai refers to it as a compact off-road SUV that’s inspired by extreme events. The concept was brought to life at the Hyundai America Technical Center in Irvine, California.
The off-road SUV draws design elements from Hyundai’s Extra Rugged Terrain (XRT) models, such as the IONIQ 5 XRT, Santa Cruz XRT, and the new Pallisade XRT Pro.
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Although it’s a concept, Hyundai said the Crater Concept is a testament to its commitment to designing future XRT vehicles that are more functional, more capable, and more emotional.
The Hyundai Crater off-road SUV Concept (Source: Hyundai)
“CRATER began with a question: ‘What does freedom look like?’ This vehicle stands as our answer,” Hyundai’s global design boss, SangYup Lee said.
The off-road SUV features Hyundai’s new Art of Steel design theme, first showcased on the THREE concept at the Munich Motor Show in September.
The Hyundai Crater Concept (Source: Hyundai)
Hyundai said the design team was guided by one clear goal: To create a rugged and capable vehicle that’s designed to go anywhere. The Crater Concept embodies that vision with added wide skid plates, 33″ off-road tires, limb risers, rocker panels, and a roof platform.
Hyundai designed the interior for “tech-savvy adventure seekers,” with a singular design centered around a high-brow crash pad that stretches across the dashboard.
The Hyundai Crater Concept (Source: Hyundai)
The concept also swaps the traditional infotainment setup for a head-up display that spans the entire front window, which Hyundai said includes a live rearview camera.
Hyundai’s off-roader includes a new Off-Road Controller for front and rear locking differentials, as well as a terrain selector with modes including Sand, Snow, and Mud. Other off-road features include downhill brake control, trailer brake control, a compass, and an altimeter.
Although Hyundai said it was electric, it didn’t reveal any further details about the powertrain. The off-road SUV could be a battery-electric or fuel-cell-electric vehicle.
Like the new Nexo, Hyundai’s hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, the concept features “HTWO” lamps exclusive to its FCEVs.
Earlier this week, the design team at Hyundai Design North America also introduced its new design and ideation studio codenamed “The Sandbox.” The creative design studio is set to serve as a global hub for future XRT vehicles and gear.
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