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Case Study – An EV Supplier Evaluates Electromagnetic Propulsion for a Next-Gen Platform
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An automotive Tier 1 supplier was exploring electromagnetic propulsion for a next-generation EV platform. They had the manufacturing and OEM relationships; they needed a complete design handoff—documentation, manufacturing blueprints, implementation resources—with clear performance claims (440 kN torque, 131% better than a documented high-performance EV comparison, zero-emission). They were not looking for a concept; they needed a defined technical path for evaluation and partnership.
The situation. The supplier had seen the global EV market grow and had evaluated several propulsion alternatives. They wanted something that was positioned for automotive manufacturers, Tier 1s, or strategic investors—a complete design and documentation set that enabled evaluation and development. Market and revenue context (Valuations page) they would handle; the product’s job was to deliver the technical package.
What they did. They evaluated the Electric Autocar product from Christopher Gabriel Brown: electromagnetic propulsion, 440 kN torque, zero-emission, complete documentation, manufacturing blueprints, implementation resources. They reviewed the torque comparison and the handoff contents and confirmed terms: one finished product copy; IP not transferred unless separately agreed. They referenced the Valuations and Make a Bid pages for payment options and the rest of the portfolio (Electric Jet, Quantum Battery, AutoPhi) for context.
Outcome. The supplier included the Electric Autocar in their propulsion shortlist and opened technical discussions with an OEM. No vehicle was built in the case study period; the outcome was a go for the next phase. They cited the completeness of the handoff and the clarity of the performance comparison as factors. They noted the portfolio’s consistent handoff model across energy and computing.
Takeaway. EV differentiation is moving to range, performance, cost, and supply chain. The decision to evaluate a new propulsion technology often turns on whether the handoff is complete and the performance claims are documented. The Electric Autocar was evaluated on that basis.
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