yup. I'm aware of the Lightning price range. Ford is not going to sell much $90,474 version after the initial first adapter buyers IMO.BTW, the F-150 Lighting has MSRP up to $90K, without tri-motor or 500+ mile range:
"The MSRP of the F-150 Lightning ranges from $39,974 up to around $90,474."
There are not that many $85k trucks out there. Most of the trucks out there are low to mid range. Before covid, most of the expensive heavy option trucks had $10-$15k off MRSP discount. So the true price was never $85k and only very few trucks were sold in that price range.Shit I see so many lariat F-250 models out on the roads here in Texas, those are easily 85k optioned out. A basic optioned F-150 4x4 is around 45k these days.
Should be like the corvair trucks the jeep forward control, the original Ford econoline. I totally agree.I get why they are doing it. It's just a shame that they have to do that because it would be a better vehicle in every way if they moved the cab forward.
Better visibility, better driving position, much more versatile layout behind the passenger area...
We'll have to see how the independent rear suspension does. My FJ has it and while it's great for offroad, towing is a bit squirrelly and hammers the shocks.
The only thing I don't like about it is that it's an SUV. Pickups have 8' beds, that's where all the utility comes from.
And how many people that buy pickups actually do those things on a regular basis? They're useful questions for those that do those things, but I'd bet the vast majority of truck buyers never do any of those things, ever (or maybe only some local moving every blue moon).I am actually fairly impressed. Doesnt look crazy like the cybertruck, not prohibitively expensive. Tesla is far ahead on the fast charger network, I assume.
This could work for moving things around on the jobsite: short distances, recharge overnight.
However, still question the range for carrying heavy loads any kind of distance, and for towing a large camper or other heavy load.
Review time:
* Dunno about towing. Towing with Teslas kills the range.
And as far as I've seen/read, Ford has kinda "refused" to mention tow range....probably because it's horrid, like you imagine it would be. Conservative estimates are 40-60% decrease in range, depending upon tow weight.
Sad, really. Towing is exactly why I own a pickup. It is useful for a whole range of reasons, but towing was my primary reason for purchasing a pickup. (Currently two reasons....my 18' Fish-n-Ski outboard and my 12' enclosed trailer, with 6.5' interior stand-up height.)
I thought the pic Ford provided in its advertising of the Ford with the travel trailer, was overly ambitious in its suggestions. Cannot imagine someone trying to take that travel trailer out for a vacation/whatever, with the truck loaded with family/people and the bed loaded with crap, traveling 100 miles down the road every 12 hours. Makes going cross-country a tedious effort, at best.
And as far as I've seen/read, Ford has kinda "refused" to mention tow range....probably because it's horrid, like you imagine it would be. Conservative estimates are 40-60% decrease in range, depending upon tow weight.
Sad, really. Towing is exactly why I own a pickup. It is useful for a whole range of reasons, but towing was my primary reason for purchasing a pickup. (Currently two reasons....my 18' Fish-n-Ski outboard and my 12' enclosed trailer, with 6.5' interior stand-up height.)
I thought the pic Ford provided in its advertising of the Ford with the travel trailer, was overly ambitious in its suggestions. Cannot imagine someone trying to take that travel trailer out for a vacation/whatever, with the truck loaded with family/people and the bed loaded with crap, traveling 100 miles down the road every 12 hours. Makes going cross-country a tedious effort, at best.
An EV obviously wouldn't be desirable for your purposes.
Good News Everyone! Texas is proactively addressing the issue of road maintenance and the fact EVs don’t pay gas taxes.
SB1728 which they should be voting on shortly will apply a yearly registration tax to all EV and hybrid vehicles.
Should work out to be twice as expensive to register a F150E vs driving a regular F150 10,000miles a year.
Colorado looks like a $50 registration charge? California implemented a $100 fee this year supposedly.heck, they are late to the party. it costs us about the same amount to register a Volt in Colorado worth about 8 grand, vs my $30k truck.
This legislation is strictly to punish EVs
Many states now have that yearly BS EV registration tax. It's $200 a year in GA for EV tag vs $20 for ICE tag.Good News Everyone! Texas is proactively addressing the issue of road maintenance and the fact EVs don’t pay gas taxes.
SB1728 which they should be voting on shortly will apply a yearly registration tax to all EV and hybrid vehicles.
Should work out to be twice as expensive to register a F150E vs driving a regular F150 10,000miles a year.
There’s defiantly not a $10k premium on most of the models.
A 4x4 XL Supercrew 5.5k’ base stripper is $42k with destination.
Though I expect the base commercial lighting is more of a stripper than the base XL.
The lighting is definitely competitively priced.
We bought a 2018 F150 XLT 5.5' bed brand new in 2018. Sticker price was $53k, we paid around $35k.
We upgraded last year to a 2019 Lariat 6.5' bed with all the technology packages 0% interest). Sticker was $72k plus the dealer add-ons. (Tonneau cover, hood protector, window protectors) We paid $65k.
We don't NEED a truck most of the time...as Greenman points out, it's basically an SUV with an open bed...but a few times every year, I'll haul a load of dirt or stack of lumber or...stuff that would be difficult to stick in the trunk of a Honda...or even a real SUV.
I'll wait and see how the Lightning pans out...but the more info comes out, the more appealing it becomes.
Right now, the 300 mile range is challenging for me. A few times every year, we jump in the truck for a road trip. Generally, I put on 400-500 miles per day when I'm trying to get somewhere...often driving in places where electric charging stations are unheard of.
Time will tell whether this will work for us.
(3) can power your house if needed, and (4) has a monster frunk is pretty dang appealing!
tbh 300 miles is the biggest roadblock for me. That & the short bed. The more I read about the Lightning, the more intrigued I am. They did a phenomenally good job on it! I'm sure the battery & longer bed lengths will become available in coming years. I'm still a Cybertruck fanboy for sure, but the fact that the F-150 (1) looks normal, (2) has a ton of outlet plugs, (3) can power your house if needed, and (4) has a monster frunk is pretty dang appealing!
I just can't wrap my head around the looks of the Cybertruck. It's horribly butt-ugly...
I just can't wrap my head around the looks of the Cybertruck. It's horribly butt-ugly...
I'm not sure on the regs in the US but they wont be selling it anywhere in Europe unless it has a good crumple zone.I don't like the looks, but I would put up with them for a thick, durable stainless steel body.
I think it's beautiful. I think people are going to be shocked how great it looks when they see it in person.I just can't wrap my head around the looks of the Cybertruck. It's horribly butt-ugly...