Great article on driving.ca. Goes into the nuts and bolts of how electricity is consumed as you drive. At 5 Celsius 10% of electricity in the ford truck was used just to keep the battery warm. Going highway speed you lose almost 50% of your range. Ideal speed is 30 kmh. We are definitely governed by morons, EV’s would be useless outside the city in the dead of winter imo.
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Tis true. And its roughly 50% of that goes to cabin heating... guess just have to wear a heated jacket!
That being said... gas cars at 20 degrees F lose roughly 15% of their mileage so its not like ICEs are immune to the cold. On short trips (3-5 miles) its closer to 25 %.
However.. we cant pretend like EV range isnt going to keep on increasing and battery tech isnt going to get better.
Right now they arent feasible in the country... but.. when will they be?
The vast majority of my trips are under 200 kms.. well under..but i live only 35 ish outside of a big city. I could easily get my with a ford lightning truck.. and at fuel costs vs electrical costs i am wayyyy further ahead to have an EV.
But even for those of us who live further out where its less feasible and to play devils advocate ..
How many km range would you need to consider it? 800? 1200? And how many of us drive more than the range of the long range motors/batteries in a given day?
I would absolutely love to drive an ev truck.. but for me currently, it just doesnt quite make sense. But lets be honest with ourselves... in the not too distant future... it sure will!
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Originally posted by goalieguy847 View PostTis true. And its roughly 50% of that goes to cabin heating... guess just have to wear a heated jacket!
That being said... gas cars at 20 degrees F lose roughly 15% of their mileage so its not like ICEs are immune to the cold. On short trips (3-5 miles) its closer to 25 %.
However.. we cant pretend like EV range isnt going to keep on increasing and battery tech isnt going to get better.
Right now they arent feasible in the country... but.. when will they be?
The vast majority of my trips are under 200 kms.. well under..but i live only 35 ish outside of a big city. I could easily get my with a ford lightning truck.. and at fuel costs vs electrical costs i am wayyyy further ahead to have an EV.
But even for those of us who live further out where its less feasible and to play devils advocate ..
How many km range would you need to consider it? 800? 1200? And how many of us drive more than the range of the long range motors/batteries in a given day?
I would absolutely love to drive an ev truck.. but for me currently, it just doesnt quite make sense. But lets be honest with ourselves... in the not too distant future... it sure will!
I looked at lightning F-150 and a similar gas F-150 . $90,000 plus for the EV version, $60,000 for the gas . Dodge even cheaper
You can buy fuel for a lifetime for $30,000 and have a reliable truck regardless of weather .
Ended up with a 3L Duramax GM . About the same cost as the F-150 and double the fuel mileage. Farm diesel now below $1.20
Maybe in 5-7 years E trucks will make sense
Unless you live in or near a city , still need a truck and somehow get the purchase pricing more equivalent .
I would still be very concerned on the resale price on an E truck . If it needs battery replacement after 5-7 years that truck will be worth zero .
But I also agree , things are changing fast , so time will tell . I , like you will wait this out for at least 5 years and see how things play out for E trucks
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That’s minus five C. What if you’re towing a trailer and it’s minus thirty five C? They don’t say a thing about that?
Sure they will improve. No doubt about that.
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Originally posted by Sheepwheat View PostThat’s minus five C. What if you’re towing a trailer and it’s minus thirty five C? They don’t say a thing about that?
Sure they will improve. No doubt about that.
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If you can only utilize it as a second or third vehicle that gets rich.
If I lived in California it would be a no brainer first choice and the only vehicle you would need.
I keep looking but it doesn't make sense to me to spend that kind of money and have 2 or 3 vehicles.
Not even mention of range anxiety out here with only occasional chargers every 1hr or 2 down the road. If you get there and somebody is charging your there for 1 1/2 hrs.
Not ready.
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Originally posted by shtferbrains View PostIf you can only utilize it as a second or third vehicle that gets rich.
If I lived in California it would be a no brainer first choice and the only vehicle you would need.
I keep looking but it doesn't make sense to me to spend that kind of money and have 2 or 3 vehicles.
Not even mention of range anxiety out here with only occasional chargers every 1hr or 2 down the road. If you get there and somebody is charging your there for 1 1/2 hrs.
Not ready.
Especially when there is no climate emergency as being preached by the same politicians and climate crusaders
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostPlug in Hybrids with longer range will cover off a lot of the issues in colder rural areas.
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I did see the new Dodge ETorque 1/2 ton .
Never took it for a drive . Has the 5.7 Hemi with ETorque assist to reduce fuel consumption on stop / starts and when high torque is needed .
Price tag was very high . Salesman was not even real sure how well it performs.
Neat idea , but doubt the hefty price tag would ever pay for itself .
The new 6 cyl Hurricane motor will blow it away in fuel economy and power apparently.
Changes are coming , but most trucks coming to market are to be full electric not hybrid I was told.
A hybrid truck will make sense if it’s not grossly overpriced where it will never pay for itself in a lifetime.
I guess those who do buy one could virtue signal everyone else to justify it .
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