China’s Hubei Hantek Equipment Manufacturing has developed what it says is the world’s first one-piece, low-pressure-cast, all-aluminium frame for a large vehicle, created for the BYD Yangwang U8L luxury SUV.
According to CarNewsChina, which picked up the original report from Chinese tech site IT-home, the frame made its public debut on Dec 2 at the Yangtze River Industry and Technology Innovation Conference in Hubei.
Instead of piecing together dozens of aluminium sections with welds, rivets and bolts, Hantek casts the U8L’s underbody as a single, giant component.
The casting of the Rolls-Royce Cullinan rival spans roughly 4.2 square metres, with sections as thin as 4mm and others up to 50mm thick, a thickness spread of more than 12:1 that the company claims has not been achieved before in a single shot.
It replaces the traditional multi-part lower frame, but not the entire body shell, which still uses a separate cage structure above that bolts to this very stiff base.
The point of all this is fewer weak spots.
Every joint is normally a potential failure point, so deleting them is claimed to lift overall rigidity and torsional stiffness, improving both crash performance and how the big SUV behaves on the road.
Hantek also talks up a bespoke aluminium alloy and tailored heat-treatment process aimed at balancing strength, toughness and fatigue life.
BYD has also promoted the U8L’s toughness with a dramatic palm-tree drop video, though that stunt mainly showcases the strength of the upper body cage. The one-piece lower frame would still play a role in how loads are distributed, but the footage is best seen as eye-catching marketing rather than hard proof of what the casting itself can do.
The much-shared promo video shot (this one from Carscoops Youtube channel) in Hainan showed a towering palm tree dropped repeatedly onto the U8L’s roof. The cabin stayed intact and the SUV drove away, sending a clear “this thing is tough” message.
Viewed more critically, the tree seemed to land with much of its weight off to one side, so only part of the load actually hit the roof. If that was the ceiling of what it could withstand, it falls short of a US IIHS roof-strength test, which uses rigid steel beams that barely deform, unlike a bending palm trunk.
No doubt, the tree drop is a flashy demo that hints the structure is strong, but until the U8/U8L is put through IIHS-style roof-crush tests with proper numbers, we can’t say how it stacks up against other SUVs in scientifically meaningful terms.
Underneath the stunt sits a serious flagship: a six-seat, full-size plug-in hybrid SUV priced at 1.28 million yuan (RM745,000), with a 2.0-litre turbo engine, four electric motors and a 55.53kWh Blade battery on BYD’s e4 platform, good for 880kW, 1,520Nm, about 200km of EV running and 1,160km combined range.
Hantek already supplies aluminium chassis parts to BYD, Nio, Hongqi and Dongfeng Lantu, and this mega-casting could preview how tomorrow’s heavy-hitting EVs are built.


















