Cool stuff, but as with anything electric; battery range and charge time are always going to be the holdouts. Especially for trucks; who commonly go 400-800 miles a day. And time is money: if they can't recharge completely in the time it takes for a normal break they're not going to want to do it.
The article mentions short hauls and local freight, but even so, 100 miles is pretty limiting to those figures, even with a single-operator day-cab setup.
Torque-wise, electric makes a ton of sense, even if it's a hybrid.
Interesting. There article says that it would be a Class 7 semi but Wikipedia [1] puts it as a Class 8 based on the weight limit given.
I can imagine that this could catch on in the construction industry to pull waste/concrete from job sites. There is downtime between hauls so that you could re-charge and you aren't necessarily driving very far so you may get multiple trips between charges.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 17.4 ms ] threadThis is smart on Cummin's part, since they own most of the drivetrain anyway.
[1] https://www.fitzgeraldgliderkits.com/what-is-a-glider-kit/ (This is a particular manufacturer, but many companies offer these cabs)
The article mentions short hauls and local freight, but even so, 100 miles is pretty limiting to those figures, even with a single-operator day-cab setup.
Torque-wise, electric makes a ton of sense, even if it's a hybrid.
I can imagine that this could catch on in the construction industry to pull waste/concrete from job sites. There is downtime between hauls so that you could re-charge and you aren't necessarily driving very far so you may get multiple trips between charges.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truck_classification#Table_of_...