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by roadbuster 69 days ago
I think Clearmotion has a very interesting technology and product (ride stabilization), but let's paint a full picture here: the company was founded in 2009, took on $370 million in funding, and only recently landed large contracts (a $1 billion dollar deal in 2023 with Chinese auto manufacturer, Nio).

I'm sure they were in a constant struggle for survival and had to "move fast" to stay afloat, but their technology is more than a decade in the making.

3 comments

I think the super long timelines in automotive make it really hard to succeed. Really impressed with what ClearMotion accomplished given that
I would venture a guess that there is little interest in adding complexity to the humble shock absorber. A simple passive mechanical system is replaced with a complex servomechanism featuring sensors and actuators which live a hard life under a car.

What is the longevity vs a passive system? How much is it to service vs standard suspension? How much does this change the overall suspension design? How much weight does it add? I bet the answers to those questions since 2009 were not at all enticing to automotive designers or bean counters.

Personally, I would not want such a system on my car. It sounds like another expensive maintenance item you have to deal with that adds little or no value.

And it is extremely likely Nio made that deal to see whether they could embrace, extend, extinguish them.