Ford Super Duty Going Electric
Check out this homepage article about Ford's plans to make the Super Duty a plug-in electric. Obviously Ford thinks there's a market for big electric haulers. What do you think?
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Yeah, I hear the whole bed is gonna be one giant battery.
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A plug-in hybrid is a HUGE deal for trucks.
Kudos to Ford for being the first :-X22 |
Originally Posted by Krewat
(Post 10632959)
A plug-in hybrid is a HUGE deal for trucks.
Kudos to Ford for being the first :-X22 But a Big Kudos to Ford |
Diesel-electric locomotives are a sweet deal.... maybe a smallish Deutz diesel turning a generator to supplement the plug-in capacity.
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It IS still a "hybrid" - the big deal is that you can plug it in and charge up the batteries.
And, I'm sure, has regenerative braking, so everytime you hit the brakes, it recharges the batteries. Which is great in city driving... |
That's sweet now maybe a SD can get 20 mpg city. I'm curious how strong/what type of an electric motor they will be using. i know electric motors have 100% torque @ 1 rpm but our trucks are heavy and a lot pull heavy. If its not done right i can see a lot of diesel guys moaning because they don't have the pulling power off the line.
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Who's going to start the "PSD vs. V10 vs. HYBRID" thread? :-X19
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Originally Posted by BigPigDaddy
(Post 10633836)
Who's going to start the "PSD vs. V10 vs. HYBRID" thread? :-X19
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Diesel locomotives have been hybrids for years and are very efficient and powerful. If we could start merging that into truck we could move mountains. Well, more of them.
I think it is a great idea, but should always be an OPTION on the trucks, never standardized. At least not until the electric vehicle infrastructure is well rooted. On the flip side, why would anyone built a big electric vehicle infrastructure if there isnt a lot of demand. |
Yea, Ford, Good luck with that. A Super Duty Volt, are they nuts. A $90,000 truck that will sell for $120,000, I'll take two..... :-missingt
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Originally Posted by TreySpooner65
(Post 10634021)
Diesel locomotives have been hybrids for years and are very efficient and powerful.
A diesel locomotive is a diesel driving a generator, driving an electric motor. Quite a different thing. |
Originally Posted by Krewat
(Post 10634063)
Once again (see the other Ford hybrid thread here in the SD forum)... Locomotives are not "hybrid". A hybrid has a battery and electric motor, and an internal combustion engine.
A diesel locomotive is a diesel driving a generator, driving an electric motor. Quite a different thing. |
Originally Posted by Krewat
(Post 10634063)
Once again (see the other Ford hybrid thread here in the SD forum)... Locomotives are not "hybrid". A hybrid has a battery and electric motor, and an internal combustion engine.
A diesel locomotive is a diesel driving a generator, driving an electric motor. Quite a different thing. Evolution You are correct, most locomotives are in fact a diesel motor, powering an electric motor. Why? They simplest reason is torque. With an electric motor you can dial down the speed rather than having to shift. Can you imagine shifting in a train? That is obviously a very basic explanation, but that is the premise of the design. http://science.howstuffworks.com/tra...ocomotive1.htm |
And we thought the 6.0 was an over complicated electronic nightmare! Wait until you have to wait for the tech to graduate his night school electronics theory courses to repair your truck, when the early Raymond intellidrive 1 systems we were backed up 3 months just learning how to make the scr's live through the replacement process, then Steinbock went to a/c drives and it took an electronics engineering degree to simply troubleshoot regen braking problems and 1 fault code shut every thing down on all these systems! Now that being said and that I worked on these things for a living, as well as trained apprentice technicians to work on them, there is absolutely no way in heck I would buy one, the technologey to make it rugged enough for my pick-up is still 10 years out!
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