Originally posted by Partners
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Tesla cybertruck
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The ideal 3/4 ton truck for rural customers would be aluminum body, tilt hood, choice of aluminum flat bed or regular box, options radio and air conditioning only, keeping electronics to the bare minimum, rear airbags with electric clutch on compressor with front and rear factory air couplers , cummins engine or if electric powered have the option of installing a Webasto heater with 20 gallon tank for winter survival and 22.5 tires.
I know it would be expensive but you would only go through 2 or 3 in your farming career and that's probably why they don't manufacture them.
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Originally posted by rumrocks View Postif electric powered have the option of installing a Webasto heater with 20 gallon tank for winter survival
Electric heat is an energy hog.
A small tank of diesel, even 5 gallons, would go a long ways for supplemental heat. If you had a coolant system like a proheat, you could even wrap the batteries to keep them warm.
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0-60 in 2.9 seconds thats supercar stats. Also individual wheel motors would make for the most capable 4wd possible. 500 mile range in day would take care of 99% of my driving needs. Say you stop for lunch and plug into a super charger for an hour. Might take it to 800 mile range which would get me to Pocatello. Lets say its half that when -30+ still pretty respectable.
The vibrationless, quiet, yet high performance experience of electric might change a few opinions. Especially when your gasser is eating it's dust.
Who else here has made the switch to virtually all cordless power tools? My half inch cordless impact has the same or better specs that the best air impact. Haven't used an air impact in so long.
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Originally posted by blackpowder View PostOr spend $70k less for the vehicle and efficiently burn a stable, storable liquid.
Most farms have pretty adequate power infrastructure as well so charging on site should not be an issue at all. Also in regards to cold temperatures an electric vehicle does surprisingly well. You don't ever have to worry if it will start. The cabin can go from -30 to +28 in about 10 minutes. Yes range will decrease due to the added density of cold air, winter tires, and snow on the road.
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yea , lots of good points , sf
never thought of truck picking you up when you move fields ! would sure be a big help
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Charging that thing overnight in your garage would easily add another few hundred bucks to your monthly power bill. Probably the same as you would put into it in gas in a month. But with all the downsides, reliable range, heat, expense to maintain. You wont be swinging wrenches on that engine.
You can buy 2 plain jane gas trucks for the same price.
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Originally posted by jazz View PostCharging that thing overnight in your garage would easily add another few hundred bucks to your monthly power bill. Probably the same as you would put into it in gas in a month. But with all the downsides, reliable range, heat, expense to maintain. You wont be swinging wrenches on that engine.
You can buy 2 plain jane gas trucks for the same price.
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I am all for electric vehicles, especially for replacing a short trip runaround vehicle such as a farm pickup truck. So many advantages, especially as compared to a modern diesel with emissions controls. Cheap to operate, reliable, maintenance free, high performance, true 4wd, no emissions control nightmares, no road tax, plus all the reasons already listed by other posters.
Trouble is, they are being marketed as a solution to a non existent problem. And they don't even solve that. The electricity grid is still, and will remain, dominantly powered by fossil fuels, so the electric vehicles, are still fossil fuel powered, still emitting beneficial CO2, and still result in all of the unintended consequences of resource extraction, all of the inefficiencies inherent in converting hydrocarbons to useful energy are still there, except we also get to add the line losses and the conversion to and from electrical energy to the list.
If electric vehicles ever achieve sufficient market penetration, governments will discover that tax revenues to build and maintain our road infrastructure is sorely lacking, and the free ride on not paying fuel taxes will come to an end, likely replaced by a per km driven fee based off GPS, where every road becomes a toll road, taking a large bite out of the cost advantage.
And most importantly, well-intentioned, but grossly uninformed and ignorant governments are determined to drive electricity costs to levels far beyond being competitive with fossil fuels, with their renewable mandates. If reducing CO2 emissions is their goal, then FF power plants need to be replaced by drastically more expensive renewables, and then the cost advantage of driving electric vehicles is lost completely, unless of course, they also tax FF vehicles disproportionately to force the market into the least worst option.
In other words, the cost advantage to operating an EV is likely at its peak right now, and will only decline from here forward.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Nov 25, 2019, 08:57.
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