now...don't forget they also have to make that mall cruise before theiy shut downWhat, a 4 foot bed isn't enough? Most trucks drive around hauling nothing but air and generate TONS of carbon dioxide doing it.
now...don't forget they also have to make that mall cruise before theiy shut downWhat, a 4 foot bed isn't enough? Most trucks drive around hauling nothing but air and generate TONS of carbon dioxide doing it.
Not wanting to be the proverbial fly in the ointment, but how do folks like me - that live way out in the boonies - make the 450-500 mile round trip to major hospitals in an electric truck? The other really big question is where do I charge the silly thing that doesn't take several hours - it's already a long enough day going & coming back?Think outside the bed . . .
How about a cab-forward truck with two rows of seats (front and rear) and then a bed that could take a 4 by 8 sheet of plywood/wallboard/whatever lying flat? Some 60s vintage Econolines, some B100 series Dodge trucks and the really old VW tranporters were built like that, but only with single cabs. (There are a very few double cab VW transporters, some are even 4wd.)
Issues would be front end safety (no crush zones except the driver) and poor engine access (which we already have).
Now suppose it was (heresy!) electric. That would take care of the weight distribution problem (nose-heavy, rear too light, moving the battery towards the rear of the vehicle solves that) and the 2wd/4wd question (add more motors, or leave them out). Not having the standard "engine in front" layout of the trucks we can buy now allows much more flexibility in the layout of the vehicle.
Losing the three, four, five feet of front hood and gas/diesel engine shortens the overall length of the vehicle, and allows the cargo bed to increase to a useful size. You wind up with a more useful vehicle in the same size footprint as a standard (say) F150. Easy to park, easy to drive, good visibility, useful, you can add a cap for security (which we already do), AND it can have a built-in inverter so you can plug in your power tools out in the boonies.
Then of course, there's this . . .
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Best Regards,
Mike/Florida
Same here I need to do 380 miles to go to work, during the winter I wont be able to make it in one shot... not too stress about it tho that net zero and no more internal combustion engine vehicle is not going to happen ...Not wanting to be the proverbial fly in the ointment, but how do folks like me - that live way out in the boonies - make the 450-500 mile round trip to major hospitals in an electric truck? The other really big question is where do I charge the silly thing that doesn't take several hours - it's already a long enough day going & coming back?
IMO instead of charging, electric cars should have standard sized modular battery packs (small / short range cars have one, bigger & longer distance vehicles may have many) and service stations should swap the packs when you pull up and you go on your merry way moments later, and the station plugs the packs in.Same here I need to 380 miles to go to work, during the winter I wont be able to make it in one shot... not too stress about it tho that net zero and no more internal combustion engine vehicle is not going to happen ...
Its all crazy. Just imagine living in Rolling Fork Mississippi. Town destroyed, no power for weeks and you own some joke of an electric vehicle. Any time power needs to be put to the ground or work needs to be done the only way to get it done as of right now is gas/diesel. I own a 6.6 LB7 Duramax and a 7.3 OBS Powerstroke. If and when they need it I will rebuild them and I will do that until I am physically unable to do so. I haul tons of grain and alfalfa monthly and cords of fire wood yearly. Right now my round trip to buy "affordable" alfalfa is over 3 hours in clear weather.Not wanting to be the proverbial fly in the ointment, but how do folks like me - that live way out in the boonies - make the 450-500 mile round trip to major hospitals in an electric truck? The other really big question is where do I charge the silly thing that doesn't take several hours - it's already a long enough day going & coming back?
I believe that someday that concern, as well as many others will work their way out. Technology is improving, and I have a lot of faith in our ability to overcome obstacles. When that happens many of us may choose to go electric, because the vehicles will have proven they are worth it.Not wanting to be the proverbial fly in the ointment, but how do folks like me - that live way out in the boonies - make the 450-500 mile round trip to major hospitals in an electric truck? The other really big question is where do I charge the silly thing that doesn't take several hours - it's already a long enough day going & coming back?
The thing I don't understand is that Tesla among others are touting the ability to feed into the grid when power is down. Why would I kill the only chance I had of bugging out if things got dicey for some reason; i.e., a flood or forest fire?Its all crazy. Just imagine living in Rolling Fork Mississippi. Town destroyed, no power for weeks and you own some joke of an electric vehicle. Any time power needs to be put to the ground or work needs to be done the only way to get it done as of right now is gas/diesel. I own a 6.6 LB7 Duramax and a 7.3 OBS Powerstroke. If and when they need it I will rebuild them and I will do that until I am physically unable to do so. I haul tons of grain and alfalfa monthly and cords of fire wood yearly. Right now my round trip to buy "affordable" alfalfa is over 3 hours in clear weather.
Carbon dioxide? You mean that stuff that has increased by 140 parts per million? The stuff that the climate, uh, 'exspurts' harp on? Yeah, it's gone way up. Increased by 0.014% of the atmosphere in 300 years. At the current rate, it will be up another 0.026% in 2123. A total of 680 parts per million. Oxygen is more than 200,000 PPM.What, a 4 foot bed isn't enough? Most trucks drive around hauling nothing but air and generate TONS of carbon dioxide doing it.