From the UX presentation from CES it looks like that there may be three options for the Harvester. Pure EV, Max, and Auto. I hope they allow us to set when the Harvester kicks on.It'd be nice to be able to start the RE shortly after getting on the road when I know I'll be going a long distance without reliable charging. That way the RE has as much time as possible to top off the battery, rather than waiting for the battery charge level to deplete and then needing more power out of the RE
As long as the air intake is up high…I'm curious how the engine "tucked low, out back" is gonna work out with their claimed 3 foot fording capability.
And the engine is running...As long as the air intake is up high…
Can you just put me into cryo-sleep until mine is ready?Only time will tell, we have a full 3 years.
I'm a little confused. Why will the smaller Battery Pack be unable to deliver as much power? Can you clarify for me?I finally found this again to cite the source. This seems to provide some insight to what the Harvester genset will be capable of.
One drawback of the smaller (150-mi.) battery pack is, it most likely will be unable to deliver as much power as the larger (350-mi.) EV pack. So, for maximum uphill towing performance, the genset must be allowed to provide a high fraction of its max continuous power rating even while the battery is at a fairly high state of charge so that the combined output of the genset & the battery pack will be available for pulling heavy loads up steep grades. I'm already wondering if they'll be able to provide enough cooling capacity for these high demand situations.
More options increases costs. Each battery pack size may be made up of the same smaller cells, but it still requires engineering and testing for each one. There is also design and production costs for the shells, the BMS, and the software.Not really.
The Scout is not an i-MiEV or a Leaf.
The pack is composed of a large number of fairly small cells. The higher capacity pack will most likely just be longer.
How many currently available EVs offer only one battery pack option?
That's the general idea. Until we have the details on the generator package, how fast it will charge, and how much charge you can get from a tank of fuel, it's all speculation.Trying to understand this gas extender, and I know there isn’t a ton of information out there. Theoretically, say I’m on a long trip across states, I could just keep refilling the gas extender to keep the battery charged, right? I know this wouldn’t give me full electric charge range, but my guess is it would give me the extended range of ~150 miles or so to keep going?
more like you could keep going another 350 miles. Everything the company has put out so far indicates a 150 mile battery and an extra 350 miles of range in gas. So unless you stop to plug in somewhere, filling up with gas should get you another 350 for each tank but no more—and probably half that towing.Trying to understand this gas extender, and I know there isn’t a ton of information out there. Theoretically, say I’m on a long trip across states, I could just keep refilling the gas extender to keep the battery charged, right? I know this wouldn’t give me full electric charge range, but my guess is it would give me the extended range of ~150 miles or so to keep going?