Gen(R3)Xer
Well-Known Member
There are many factors as to why Rivian chose to use the sizes of batteries that they have in the R2 (as far as we can speculate). Here’s my hot take.My Tri Max is better, but I doubt a 98 KW battery in the R2 will be as good as the 131 battery in the original R1s. I know we all view things for our use case, but given dcfc pedestrian charge curve and competition I think the small pack size is a mistake.
The R2 is meant to be affordable. The battery is the most expensive part of the car (30-40% of the cost to manufacture). Rivian is currently buying 4695 cells from LG with a future plan to produce them domestically. The battery pack is structural this time. The R2 is smaller than the R1S and can physically only carry so many cells. Rivian had to find a sweet spot between the physical dimensions of the structural pack, the weight, the cost, and the willingness of customers to pay for what they’re offering.
That’s why I think there will be two battery sizes to help bring the $45K single-motor RWD R2 to market, even though most buyers will opt for the larger pack on the more expensive (higher margin) dual-motor AWD trims. I highly doubt they will put the larger battery in the single-motor RWD R2. Even though it would give it a longer range, it would make it too heavy, too expensive, and eat into the sales of the higher trims. I don’t even think they’ll make a max pack for this vehicle, as it would eat into their R1 line that they want to continue selling.
Rivian is in the business of making money so that the company can continue to expand and grow. They can’t do that if they keep losing money. Maybe once the batteries are made domestically, battery chemistries improve (sodium-ion?), or there’s some kind of technological breakthrough (solid state?) things will change, but that will take time and money.
Sponsored