Updated 8/20/24: A Lucid executive has clarified that production versions of the Gravity SUV will only include one charging port, as detailed here. This article has been updated to reflect this.
Although it was rumored that the Lucid Gravity SUV would feature two separate charging ports, as seen in new photos, one executive has clarified that this is not true.
In photos from X user BLKMDL3, or Zack, earlier this month, a display version of the Lucid Gravity was spotted sporting two charging ports.
“We were just told the Lucid gravity will have 2 charge ports as shown here- 1 with NACS and 1 with CCS,” Zack wrote in the post.
Since then, Lucid’s VP of Global Communications Nick Twork has clarified that the production vehicle will only include one charging port, saying that it’s not uncommon for pre-production vehicles to include multiple for testing purposes.
The Gravity is set to be Lucid’s second official EV launch, following the Air sedan. The EV maker officially unveiled the Gravity SUV last November, with the vehicle expected to have a price under $80,000, a range of 440 miles or more, and production slated to start later this year.
In January, Lucid began expanding the production facility in order to accommodate Gravity production. The automaker ultimately added around 3 million square feet to the factory, adding new General Assembly production line, added Quality and Semi-Knock Down (SKD) centers, larger Body and Paint shops, and new locations for its Logistics center as well as a larger Powertrain facility.
Lucid produced its first pre-production Gravity unit at its AMP-1 factory in Casa Grande, Arizona, at the end of July, after working on release candidates for the upcoming EV in the preceding weeks.
The company has also been teasing the upcoming vehicle throughout much of this year in its “Road to Gravity” video series, looking at various elements of the SUV, including its design, the Arizona production facility, and more.
Lucid joined the then-growing group of automakers that pledged to adopt Tesla’s NACS hardware in November, and was later followed by the final industry holdouts, Volkswagen and Stellantis, in the weeks to follow.
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