It can make cars cheaper, or longer range, or faster, or any number of other designs based on what the manufacturer is looking for.
But to OP's point about flight - stacking 6 Tesla motors is not an option. Stacking 6 of these YASA motors? Much less weight.
But that’s still a lot less rotating mass, and might make multiple motors attractive again.
You’re reading their marketing material. You have to think of this like all of those PR releases you’ve seen over the years about new battery technology that is 4X smaller or new hard drive tech that is 10X more efficient. The real world improvements aren’t going to be as big as their one lab test.
A Model 3 motor is already well under 150lbs, unless you start including ancillaries like the inverter and power transmission parts.
They’re not dropping “a buck fifty” from typical EV motors.
Shaving a couple percent off the total vehicle weight would still be a very good thing, but improving batter energy density by 10% or so would be a bigger deal for most EVs.
There might be some niche applications where the battery weight isn't the biggest issue -- like very short-range, light-weight vehicles that need to have enormous amounts of power for some reason.
I could see motors like this being used in power tools if they can be scaled down. A light-weight plug-in electric chainsaw would be pretty awesome.
These already exist, in both plug-in and cordless / battery powered.
According to purchasable equipment, the Model 3 engines weight ~175 lbs. If that's wrong, that's on them for claiming it. Subtract 28 lbs from that and you're at 147 lbs. That is very close to 150 lbs.
[0] https://evshop.eu/en/electric-motors/295-tesla-model-3-drive...
> This kit includes the Tesla motor, inverter, gear box, power cables and drive shafts.
Drive shafts, gearbox, power cables, inverter. Also includes the mounts, which is likely not factored into the lab calculations for this marketing material.
You cannot drop 150lbs from the Model 3 motor because it doesn’t even weigh 150lbs.
For a guy trying to drive 300 mph though maybe he should have been able to do that with math instead of sketchy road tests.