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Something's a bit "off" about the rear tire in the photo.
I don't see what you mean. That you don't see the bottom few inches of the tire?

I just thought it was a dirt track, and that wheel is running in a rut.
Are the sticks down to the axle measuring up-down motion of the wheel, for testing suspension?
 

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I don't see what you mean. That you don't see the bottom few inches of the tire?
Yes. The front tire is on the surface and a couple of inches of the rear tire are visually missing and sunken into the painterly road surface.
 
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The photo is definitely of the Test Mule Vehicle, not the production prototypes.

Cascadia Motion is not a high volume manufacturer of Electric Motors. Most of what I've seen them do are niche or low-volume commercial vehicles. Not to say they couldn't ramp up, but they were likely selected as an off-the-shelf option to get the early mule trucks running.
 

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Did you notice in the specifications that it is water-cooled, and has limited slip? I kind of figured it would be air cooled, not water cooled. Of course this is just a prototype. On more expensive cars, do they use this while it is being driven to warm the batteries in cold weather? I understand the batteries don't do as good in cold weather. I think Lucid batteries are heated with a fluid.
 

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Did you notice in the specifications that it is water-cooled, and has limited slip? I kind of figured it would be air cooled, not water cooled. Of course this is just a prototype. On more expensive cars, do they use this while it is being driven to warm the batteries in cold weather? I understand the batteries don't do as good in cold weather. I think Lucid batteries are heated with a fluid.
Water cooled is good, historically air cooled batteries tend to not perform well.
 
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Did you notice in the specifications that it is water-cooled, and has limited slip? I kind of figured it would be air cooled, not water cooled. Of course this is just a prototype. On more expensive cars, do they use this while it is being driven to warm the batteries in cold weather? I understand the batteries don't do as good in cold weather. I think Lucid batteries are heated with a fluid.
Correct, using Tesla as an example, the batteries are heated with liquid coolant, particularly when preconditioning is invoked for charging.
 

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Did you notice in the specifications that it is water-cooled, and has limited slip? I kind of figured it would be air cooled, not water cooled. Of course this is just a prototype. On more expensive cars, do they use this while it is being driven to warm the batteries in cold weather? I understand the batteries don't do as good in cold weather. I think Lucid batteries are heated with a fluid.
Limited Slip stays I hope. It would be better than Traction Control for the surfaces I will be driving on.
 

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My company work with Cascadia motors. They are fantastic, but... that motor/inverter would be easily $15k+ off-the-shelf. Even with a significant volume discount I don't think it would come close to the price point slate needs.

Also it is definitely not a Cascadia motor installed in the more complete prototypes.
Slate Auto Pickup Truck Drive Unit / Motor supplier appears as Cascadia Motion (BorgWarner) in Slate prototype video 1751723272137-9m


If that is even actually a shot from Slate, it's likely they were just using Cascadia for early prototypes.
 

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Seeing as the Cascadia motors were used for the prototypes , it would be interesting to see if one could be swapped in to a production slate. We'll have to see.
 
 
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