DIY-HP-LED
Well-Known Member
It's not all roses and climate change and subsequent policies have victims, going EV might address some taxi drivers concerns and farmers have other issues. Climate policy are not the only issues driving protests.
so we bought a f150 lighting and installed a new 400A electrical service because this thing needs a 80A breaker…more than our hot tub. Worked great for awhile but then after it was serviced for a recall the fast charging (at home on the 220V) stopped working. The 110v works and the 3P commercial chargers work (the ones that have the AC>>DC converter/conditioner at the unit) but that doesn’t do any good cause 110 takes like 3 days to charge and I don’t have 3P/480v.They are already selling small EVs in China for under $5K and by 2030 the batteries will be a lot better and cheaper. It will allow a bigger car for about the same cost and since the battery will be better and lighter it should have decent range and performance. A $5000 dollar car could be nearly bought on a whim and used for daily commuting into the city for work and plugged in to even 120 volts overnight to top up the battery. In 2030 the batteries will be cheaper and better, and the thing will be mostly built by robots in a renewables powered factory in Mexico and Eastern Europe. It seems possible and if there is a buck in it, likely.
North American and European automakers are worried and can't compete on price, prop them up screwing the consumer with tariffs until they catch up. What incentive would they have to improve while on the government dole at everybody else's expense, tariffs are taxes that Americans and others pay. Adapt or die is the rule of nature and capitalism and tariffs screw with economic evolution.
There is an old technical saying, don't get behind the power curve and America and Europe did.
I agree and a North American half ton as they are made today is hard to electrify, you need to put a lot of charge in no matter how good the batteries get. For now, a second small commuting car for most, smaller and lighter is better for an EV and if I buy one it will be small, just got a new ICE car last year after an accident. Seems the charging on 220 issue is Ford's fault and have a look online, others have the same issue, and they will get a lawyer. The globe is rapidly going EV though according to the statistics and they and the batteries will improve, charging big ones will always be an issue though, good luck with yours.so we bought a f150 lighting and installed a new 400A electrical service because this thing needs a 80A breaker…more than our hot tub. Worked great for awhile but then after it was serviced for a recall the fast charging (at home on the 220V) stopped working. The 110v works and the 3P commercial chargers work (the ones that have the AC>>DC converter/conditioner at the unit) but that doesn’t do any good cause 110 takes like 3 days to charge and I don’t have 3P/480v.
Ford is working on it but I’ll be honest; this technology is not fully baked.
It’s worth remembering that half-ton to one-ton trucks and vans are not just today’s consumer luxe statement vehicles, they are the backbone of small business and local logistics. There’s an urgent market for good green ones, be they electric or hydrogen-hybrid.I agree and a North American half ton as they are made today is hard to electrify, you need to put a lot of charge in no matter how good the batteries get. For now, a second small commuting car for most, smaller and lighter is better for an EV and if I buy one it will be small, just got a new ICE car last year after an accident. Seems the charging on 220 issue is Ford's fault and have a look online, others have the same issue, and they will get a lawyer. The globe is rapidly going EV though according to the statistics and they and the batteries will improve, charging big ones will always be an issue though, good luck with yours.
They build them to imitate 18 wheelers here, in Asia and in the here in the past, they were far lighter, smaller and more pragmatic. Less mass, more efficiency, no matter how good the batteries get, those huge half tons will still suck juice and be hard to charge.It’s worth remembering that half-ton to one-ton trucks and vans are not just today’s consumer luxe statement vehicles, they are the backbone of small business and local logistics. There’s an urgent market for good green ones, be they electric or hydrogen-hybrid.
can you point one out with the implied three axles?They build them to imitate 18 wheelers here, in Asia and in the here in the past, they were far lighter, smaller and more pragmatic. Less mass, more efficiency, no matter how good the batteries get, those huge half tons will still suck juice and be hard to charge.
Some people seem to have big trucker fantasies, the biggest and mightiest thing on the road! look at a pic of a half-ton from the 1960s and compare it to today for sheer bulk and mass.can you point one out with the implied three axles?
If you look at a truck from the 60s and reimagine it a bit, since an EV can be much more aerodynamic. The hood can be sloped to a point and the windshield can be sloped more too, even the tailgate can be designed to fold down and slide in under the bed, when it is empty which is 99% of the time for many of them. Trying to make a modern F150 or RAM into an EV is a fool's errand, the concept of a half-ton needs to be rethought from the ground up, at least for pragmatic people who make money with their trucks.can you point one out with the implied three axles?
Got it. You dodged once your claim was challenged.If you look at a truck from the 60s and reimagine it a bit, since an EV can be much more aerodynamic. The hood can be sloped to a point and the windshield can be sloped more too, even the tailgate can be designed to fold down and slide in under the bed, when it is empty which is 99% of the time for many of them. Trying to make a modern F150 or RAM into an EV is a fool's errand, the concept of a half-ton needs to be rethought from the ground up, at least for pragmatic people who make money with their trucks.
I dunno, but I think the cyber truck sucks and half tons can be designed smaller and more aerodynamic, especially when running around empty. Better batteries or nano fuel like above, perhaps hydrogen stored in hydrates and zapped by lasers to let it go. If they can't find a substitute for ICE powered light trucks that working people use, then there will be trouble.Got it. You dodged once your claim was challenged.
A baseline-useful truck will carry a stack of drywall laid flat across construction-site terrain from a hundred miles away, and have charge for the return trip with a load of trash.
Cyberyuck is a massive, useless statement vehicle.
I don’t see how you could keep that basic F150 functionality and shed a ton of weight (before adding two tons of fussy heavy Li-ion batteries).
Propose specific engineering differences in the truck you imagine. Keep the bed dimensions , loaded range and mass capacity.
Uncle Sammy wants a piece of that pie apparently. The 707 started out as a tanker for the military...
Maybe they will develop nano particles with such a high energy density they would need to be stored under pressure and would make liquids they were suspended in behave like gases.