It delivers everything Lightning customers love – near instantaneous torque and pure electric driving. But with a high-power generator enabling an estimated range of 700+ miles, it tows like a locomotive
It will, but these are slow evolving customers.Somehow, the plan to market EVs to exactly the portion of the public (and their customer base) least interested in that technology failed to take off.
You must not need to haul loads in rural areas with significant one-way trips. Electric trucks simply don't have the range to haul agricultural loads (equipment, animals, hay, crops) any distance. At the moment, anyone who works or recreates with towed equipment off the main roads and outside the population centers are in the same bucket.It will, but these are slow evolving customers.
Once you tried electric, it is very difficult to go back to gas. In particular if range anxiety is gone and price is fair. And in particular if you like it BIG.
It's a bit messier than that. When my partner and I were shopping for a car, we were considering a used BMW i3. And those came in two forms, the pure electric version, and the range extended version (which had a small gas motor that can generate additional power for the battery).The title of the article (the one I saw): Ford ends F-150 Lightning production
Is not exactly true, they are reformulating it to include a generator. So if someone wishes, they can still drive a BEV as long as they don't drain the battery too much to engage the generator?
The battery is going to be way smaller than the current one. That's why they are repurposing two battery plants.The title of the article (the one I saw): Ford ends F-150 Lightning production
Is not exactly true, they are reformulating it to include a generator. So if someone wishes, they can still drive on electric as long as they don't drain the battery too much to engage the generator?
That's fine. But how many F150 owners do haul loads in rural areas over significant lengths? For most owners its probably more about the idea of range freedom than actual need.You must not need to haul loads in rural areas with significant one-way trips. Electric trucks simply don't have the range to haul agricultural loads (equipment, animals, hay, crops) any distance. At the moment, anyone who works or recreates with towed equipment off the main roads and outside the population centers are in the same bucket.
Adding a gas generator changes that.
I am making fun of Ford (in large part because they deserve it), but their EV pivoting is not entirely bad. Their first plan was a crossover with muscle car branding and no door handles, followed by a large pickup truck. Changing directions is wise.It will, but these are slow evolving customers.
Once you tried electric, it is very difficult to go back to gas. In particular if range anxiety is gone and price is fair. And in particular if you like it BIG.
"If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there."---Charles DodgsonSomehow, the plan to market EVs to exactly the portion of the public (and their customer base) least interested in that technology failed to take off.
Exactly this. Almost all of my clients have real use for trucks - terrible roads, full beds, things actually being towed - and the routes out to their communities and sites are, at best, sparsely electrified.You must not need to haul loads in rural areas with significant one-way trips. Electric trucks simply don't have the range to haul agricultural loads (equipment, animals, hay, crops) any distance. At the moment, anyone who works or recreates with towed equipment off the main roads and outside the population centers are in the same bucket.
Adding a gas generator changes that.
The supposed midsize 2027 pickup isn’t news, we reported that months ago. Abd F-150 Lightning production has definitely ended, and Ford won’t even give a date on when the EREV replacement might appear.I'm sorry, this article is very misleading...
First Ford is not discontinuing the Lightning but instead changing it.
Also, Ford is going to produce an electric mid-size truck:
"The company is still planning on releasing a mid-sized all-electric pickup truck in 2027, the company confirmed Monday. The platform that powers that truck – born out of a skunkworks program led by former Tesla executives Doug Field and Alan Clarke – will also underpin other future Ford vehicles. "
Compare that with the Hyundai IONIQ 5. Their biggest original complaints were a lack of physical buttons and inexplicably not including a rear windshield wiper. Then they did a refresh that included a rear wiper and more buttons. Other than that, I think the battery capacity grew marginally, which was probably just process improvement.I don't understand companies that put out a compromised product (the F150 Lightning is definitely a gas truck with batteries and electric motors shoehorned into the chassis), then cry about people not wanting their product and then going back to doing things the old way.
I drive the Mach-E - and yes, it has its shortcomings, but what they need to do is fix the shortcomings, not throw out the entire product line. God, why is iterating on new tech so hard for companies to understand??
Can you tell us a bit more about why you have to replace a vehicle that is, at worst, only slightly more than 3 years old? I know the big three lack the durability of a Honda, but I'd still hope for at least a few more years than that.One of the things I love most about my Lightning is that it doesn't have a gas engine. Guess I'll be shopping for a replacement, though it doesn't seem like options are great currently.
Rivian makes a great truck, until you need to repair itI wonder if Rivian will survive just by being about the only game in town (assuming Chevy does a similar backpedal).
On the spectrum of compliance car to bespoke ground-up redesign, calling the Lightning a gas truck with batteries shoehorned is very misleading. Ford also isn't going back to the old way, they're adding towing as a realistic use case.I don't understand companies that put out a compromised product (the F150 Lightning is definitely a gas truck with batteries and electric motors shoehorned into the chassis), then cry about people not wanting their product and then going back to doing things the old way.
I drive the Mach-E - and yes, it has its shortcomings, but what they need to do is fix the shortcomings, not throw out the entire product line. God, why is iterating on new tech so hard for companies to understand??
By the time you strap a battery onto a trailer...and then whatever you are hauling, it's gonna weigh a metric shit ton. ...yes, that is a valid form of measurement where I'm from.I'm wondering, is there a reason why they don't build trailers with batteries in the belly? Is that too expensive an option for towing?