Harvester Selection -- use the gas engine to keep the batteries close to fully charged?

Chuckles

Traveler Harvester
Well-Known Member
First Name
Garrett
Joined
Oct 29, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
166
Reaction score
261
Location
Ohio
Vehicles
2019 VW Golf R, 2022 Lexus LC500
What I don't understand is why they opted for a gas engine vs a diesel. Diesel has a greater energy density which would equate to a longer range. Also, since the generator is not propelling the car you could legally run this on off road diesel. Or at minimum have an option that allows you to turn off the generator and enable it once you were off road. Seems like a diesel option would have gotten the range to between 550 to 600 miles.
Dieselgate. Plus, diesels are more expensive, heavier, and noisier.
 

Rocket13foxtrot

Traveler Harvester
Active Member
First Name
T-Roy
Joined
Nov 2, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
29
Reaction score
56
Location
Alabama
Vehicles
F-150, Ioniq 5
You'll figure it out. Even if you have to pull over for a minute to let the generator do its thing or find an actual charging station... You have double the options that a vehicle with only gas or electric powertrain has.
 

bababooey

Terra EV
Member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Dec 16, 2025
Threads
0
Messages
23
Reaction score
14
Location
Near the ocean
Vehicles
Lightning, Rivian
legally run this on off road diesel. Or at minimum have an option that allows you to turn off the generator and enable it once you were off road.
You also have to remember this thing has to be sold in California, which is still the largest EV market by a mile. CARB has been pretty clear about its stance on diesel in light-duty vehicles, and they’ve already approved rules that phase out the sale of new gas and diesel generators in RVs starting in 2028. Even though those rules don’t technically apply to an EREV range extender, they show the general direction CARB is pushing. Building a truck around a diesel generator would be swimming directly upstream against California compliance and would make it much harder to sell nationwide.
 

Goose

Terra EV
Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 2, 2024
Threads
1
Messages
111
Reaction score
185
Location
NC
Vehicles
Toyota Sequoia
You won't want the batteries constantly stored at the very top end of the charge. Depending on the chemistry used for the Harvester versions (most likely LFP) you will experience degradation much more rapidly than if you store the vehicle at 70-80%. When I say "store the vehicle", I don't mean you leave it for days on end, I just mean day to day activity.

The other side is since LFP batteries have very little voltage drop during discharge, you're going to want to let the BMS discharge the battery, then let the generator charge it back up. The BMS needs to go through cycles to correctly show your range.
 
Top