I dunno, the pack is at 350-400V and can sustain charging rates of 300A VDC. Even at 10kW you can still discharge it for 8 hours straight from a full pack.
Kubota M59, Kubota L3800, Grasshopper 428D, Topkick dump truck, 3500 dump truck, 10 ton trailer, more lighter trailers.
How are you going to charge it at that rate? If you had that you’d just use a plug in welder. And you don’t have the option of a full pack since you have to drive it to and from work. That’s besides the point that the average person can actually afford an engine driven welder.
120kW charging is only when you want a full charge in 40mins, usually at a supercharger. No reason you can't just charge overnight off of a 30A dryer outlet.
There's obviously going to be cases where it's not going to work, but there's quick jobs or cases where you're running normal power tools where it would be pretty handy. I know I've done enough work out in our field where it would have been nicer to have 120 on-tap with the truck rather than dragging out the generator and all that it entails.
Kubota M59, Kubota L3800, Grasshopper 428D, Topkick dump truck, 3500 dump truck, 10 ton trailer, more lighter trailers.
But I could have a regular pickup, the best set of cordless tools, an onboard generator for the rare instance you need 110 volt, a backhoe, and money left over. Anyone who would own that truck probably doesn’t use tools anyway.
I doubt in 4+ years when we see this that li-ion prices will be anywhere near what they are now. We've already seen huge drops in prices over the last 3 years(and great gains in capacity too). I'm not saying everyone has to get one, just laying out some ideas where there are some nifty things that having an electric powertrain brings.
If your need for a pickup is to haul your one can of trash to the dump then this isn't going to work. You will continue to need your 18 liter turbo diesel dually quab cab. If you use your truck for towing then unless it's just short trips this isn't going to work for you (drive for 2 hours, find a super charger that you can pull your truck and trailer into, then wait an hour or more for it to charge since it will most likely have a much bigger battery than any of Tesla's current offerings). Personally I think this is going to be a dud in the US for the same reason why Nissan sells so few pickups. People like their brand and aren't likely to change. Secondly people want big and beefy, not something that mixes well with energy efficient design that will benefit reducing the amount of battery charge time.