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Power Earth Transportation

'For Truckers Driving EVs, There's No Going Back' (yahoo.com) 153

The Washington Post looks at "a small but growing group of commercial medium-to-heavy-duty truck drivers who use electric trucks."

"These drivers — many of whom operate local or regional routes that don't require hundreds of miles on the road in a day — generally welcome the transition to electric, praising their new trucks' handling, acceleration, smoothness and quiet operation. "Everyone who has had an EV has no aspirations to go back to diesel at this point," said Khari Burton, who drives an electric Volvo VNR in the Los Angeles area for transport company IMC. "We talk about it and it's all positivity. I really enjoy the smoothness ... and just the quietness as well." Mike Roeth, the executive director of the North American Council for Freight Efficiency, said many drivers have reported that the new vehicles are easier on their bodies — thanks to both less rocking off the cab, assisted steering and the quiet motor. "Part of my hypothesis is that it will help truck driver retention," he said. "We're seeing people who would retire driving a diesel truck now working more years with an electric truck."

Most of the electric trucks on the road today are doing local or regional routes, which are easier to manage with a truck that gets only up to 250 miles of range... Trucking advocates say electric has a long way to go before it can take on longer routes. "If you're running very local, very short mileage, there may be a vehicle that can do that type of route," said Mike Tunnell, the executive director of environmental affairs for the American Trucking Association. "But for the average haul of 400 miles, there's just nothing that's really practical today."

There's other concerns, according to the article. "[S]ome companies and trucking associations worry this shift, spurred in part by a California law mandating a switch to electric or emissions-free trucks by 2042, is happening too fast. While electric trucks might work well in some cases, they argue, the upfront costs of the vehicles and their charging infrastructure are often too heavy a lift."

But this is probably the key sentence in the article: For the United States to meet its climate goals, virtually all trucks must be zero-emissions by 2050. While trucks are only 4 percent of the vehicles on the road, they make up almost a quarter of the country's transportation emissions.
The article cites estimates that right now there's 12.2 million trucks on America's highways — and barely more than 1% (13,000) are electric. "Around 10,000 of those trucks were just put on the road in 2023, up from 2,000 the year before." (And they add that Amazon alone has thousands of Rivian's electric delivery vans, operating in 1,800 cities.)

But the article's overall message seems to be that when it comes to the trucks, "the drivers operating them say they love driving electric." And it includes comments from actual truckers:
  • 49-year-old Frito-Lay trucker Gary LaBush: "I was like, 'What's going on?' There was no noise — and no fumes... it's just night and day."
  • 66-year-old Marty Boots: Diesel was like a college wrestler. And the electric is like a ballet dancer... You get back into diesel and it's like, 'What's wrong with this thing?' Why is it making so much noise? Why is it so hard to steer?"

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'For Truckers Driving EVs, There's No Going Back'

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    It's a truck; devote 25% of the trailer space to a ginormous battery. Range should be up to 1,000 miles or more. Hell, make the battery like the trailer so it can be swapped out for a fresh one. These people do not seem to have vision or common sense.
    • That sounds like a really good idea. The truck on it's own has a small battery but the trailer bed is a massive battery that compliments the truck's small battery.

    • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @02:45PM (#64175235) Journal

      The problem with simply adding more battery is cost and weight; The vehicle gets more expensive, and it can't carry as much cargo per trip which makes it less profitable. Even though electric trucks get an extra 2,000 lbs for their maximum laden weight to account for the battery, adding more just eats away at the weight you could be hauling goods with.

      There's a balance to be had here, and honestly since about 73% of freight travels less than 250 miles by truck [bts.gov] short-distance and last-mile haulers make the most sense to convert anyway.
      =Smidge=

      • by Stan92057 ( 737634 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:02PM (#64175257)
        Im not so sure the added 2000 pound is a good idea. It will add considerable more weigh to bridges and roads cutting their life spans down. As well as the trucks life span will be interesting to see how their maintenance costs are going to be, their new now so ya they handle better then a 10 yr old truck.
        • If we end up with so many electric trucks on the road that the added 2k is in fact turning into a real problem with roads and bridges we should consider it a success and then just repair and rebuild those things as they are going to have to be rebuilt anyway and they can be made to handle the new requirements.

          • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @06:59PM (#64175681)

            That's not the way load regulations work. Adding 2k is no problem for roads and bridges. I mean I add thousands of pounds to the truck's weight when I load it. Trucks are regulated according to grows vehicle weight, per axle. That means the maximum weight allowed when the truck is full. A normal class 8 truck loaded in total weighs no more than 80,000 lbs with 4 axles plus steer. Those are the limits imposed by state laws and they do take into account bridge loading. Greater weights can be achieved in some jurisdictions by adding axles to spread the load out. For example my trucks weigh 140,000 lbs gvw, spread out over 7 axles plus steer.

            Anyway there's no problem with batteries and motors on trucks. It's just that the weight of that comes out of your total GVW. So heavier truck means less cargo. That's all.

        • > . It will add considerable more weigh to bridges and roads

          It's less than +2.5% of the current max.

          =Smidge=

      • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @06:55PM (#64175675)

        There's no such thing as an "extra 2000 lbs." Trucks are regulated by gross vehicle weight. Your standard class 8 truck without permits is legal for 80,000 lbs. The regulations don't care how much your truck weighs empty. They only care about how much it weighs fully loaded. So anything you add to the truck comes out of the cargo.

        I'm not saying EVs and batteries are bad at all. They are good in my opinion, and the tradeoff of less cargo is probably worth it for the short hauls, given the statistic you gave there.

        • > There's no such thing as an "extra 2000 lbs." Trucks are regulated by gross vehicle weight. Your standard class 8 truck without permits is legal for 80,000 lbs.

          A a Class 8 all electric truck without permits is legal for 82,000 lbs. Hence, if your truck is electric, you get an "extra" 2,000 lbs.

          If your electric truck's dry (empty) weight happens to be less than a diesel equivalent, your max gross weight is still 82,000 lbs and you have even more weight allowance for cargo.

          Of course that's not likely to

    • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @02:52PM (#64175243) Homepage

      Truck trailers are interchangeable and are often swapped, they don't "belong" to the tractor that pulls them. This makes it less practical to build the battery into the trailer.

      There's actually plenty of room in a typical semi tractor for battery. Those vehicles are much larger than they appear.

      • by Chas ( 5144 )

        The current tesla big rig battery weighs in around 5 tons. JUST THE BATTERY.

        You're not going to expand range all that much by simply adding an extra ton or so of battery.
        Additionally it changes the dynamics of the way the truck balances front to back.

      • The axle weight limits will limit you regardless.

      • There's actually plenty of room in a typical semi tractor for battery. Those vehicles are much larger than they appear.

        With the American propensity for long cab design vs European cab over engine.

    • Two problems with the "big battery in the trailer" approach

      1. Weight. Bigger batteries weigh more, which reduces the load you can haul.

      2. Cost. Trailers are cheap, comparatively. Adding a big battery to each trailer adds a lot of cost.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by MacMann ( 7518492 )

        Two problems with the "big battery in the trailer" approach

        1. Weight. Bigger batteries weigh more, which reduces the load you can haul.

        2. Cost. Trailers are cheap, comparatively. Adding a big battery to each trailer adds a lot of cost.

        I remember working a summer job washing delivery trucks. In talking with one of the drivers once I got something of a lesson on the different kinds of trucks in use. The smaller tractors he called "pop trucks", or maybe it was "p u p trucks", that were small and had limited range. These were popular in moving cold beverages to bars and restaurants because they could better navigate the narrow streets and back alleys.

        These "pop trucks" were not all that powerful because they didn't move a lot of weight.

    • I don't think we should solve the range problem. We should target 300 & 400 mi/day on max load and expect to spend 2-3hrs charging.

      Meaning the battery at max is ranged for 500 miles. And the slow charging to 80% will extend the battery life. Tesla says 30 min for 80% but that's torture on a battery and shouldn't be done often.

      At this target, we should be able to cover the vast majority of the shipping miles. And do much more in terms of reducing emissions as most of these will include very inefficient

    • It's a truck; devote 25% of the trailer space to a ginormous battery. Range should be up to 1,000 miles or more. Hell, make the battery like the trailer so it can be swapped out for a fresh one. These people do not seem to have vision or common sense.

      Way outside my area of expertise but I see some serious issues with your proposal:

      1) 25% less trailer space means 25% less product shipped, that's going to majorly bite into your profit margins.
      2) I suspect trailer sizes are pretty standardized and the logistics industry exploits the hell out of that, so a non-standard will really screw things up.
      3) If you already had a huge infrastructure of swappable batteries for EVs maybe trucks could use that (though it's clunky since they'd need multiple batteries). B

  • by ruddk ( 5153113 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:01PM (#64175253)
    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:32PM (#64175309)

      A) If you're a non-electric vehicle parked in a charging spot, as these people will do, there should either be a hefty fine ($1,000) or vehicle getting towed. These are most likely the same asshats who take up four spots at the grocery store or will roll coal down your street to show off their "manhood".

      B) That one comment about EVs being universally better than ICE vehicles needs to get out of his parent's basement. If you don't own a home the chances of you being able to charge your vehicle at your rental unit is essentially nil. And let us not forget the huge problems [nbcchicago.com] EVs (mainly Tesla [newsweek.com]) are having trying to charge in the frozen north. And neither situation takes into consideration the length of time it takes to charge an EV compared to filling up with a tank of gas.

      • I have a valve stem remover in my car. Just in case I have a blowout on the road, or one of these asshats blocks the charger. Either or. F them.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        In Norway they mandated that apartments with marking must offer EV charging with a meter, and local governments are required to install on-street charging at favourable rates where people don't have driveways.

        It's all fixable, and even if you are so afraid of socialism that mandates aren't for you, it will become like internet access/wifi - i.e. landlords and hotels will need to offer it or their accommodation will be very unattractive.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by skam240 ( 789197 )

      Ha, whether its truck brand versus truck brand of gas versus electric the fact that it all must be some sort of "versus" thing says an awful lot about people like this.

    • by russbutton ( 675993 ) <russ@@@russbutton...com> on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:50PM (#64175337) Homepage
      Electric vehicles are still new tech and are not yet fully mature. If you think this is as good as they'll ever get, then you're correct in saying they aren't cutting it. But this tech, like most tech, will continue to improve. By the end of the decade, batteries will be solid state, have at least twice the density they do now and will cost half of what they do now.

      Electric vehicles have many inherent advantages, especially in the lack of needed maintenance. No oil changes, no spark plugs, wires, fuel injectors or carburetors, filters, belts, etc, etc. There's a whole lot of stuff they don't have which you won't have to worry about breaking.

      I'm in favor of the government ending subsidies for the sale of electric vehicles AND the oil industry. I'm also in favor of hitting electric vehicles with added annual fees to support the roads in lieu of gas taxes. Let everything cost what its real cost is, and then let people vote their wallets.

      • "I predict that within 10 years, computers will be twice as powerful, ten thousand times larger, and so expensive that only the 5 richest kings of Europe will own them" [youtube.com]

        But for real I agree, saying electric vehicles won't work because of conditions today is missing the fact we are still nascent in an entire chain of industry just starting to expand for real.

        Although I am in favor some subsidies for EV infrasture since it's not just the oil subsidies from this fiscal year they have to contend against but like

      • Electric vehicles are still new tech and are not yet fully mature.

        EV technology has been around for over 100 years, "modern" EVs have been around for over 20 years, and we're quite familiar how to build basic electronics to operate in the elements. Cars also aren't the only things that run on batteries, so it's not like we have to wait for automobile manufacturers to "figure out" how to fix all the problems other industries solved decades ago.

        We know how to build good cars. The problem is that manufacturers insist on building smartphones on wheels. That's why EVs suck.

        • I'm on my 3rd EV over the last 5 years and have NEVER had a need for a repair. All three have been 100% reliable. The only thing I've spent money on is windshield wipers.
          • Jeez of course not, you only had the vehicle during warranty!

            What's the performance for the 15 years after warranty? That's the issue.

            • My first EV was a 2013 Nissan Leaf I bought in 2018. It was 5 years old and had about 40,000 miles on it. I had it for about 18 months and it was flawless. I traded it in on a 2019 Leaf S Plus, which I drove for 3 years. Never had a problem with it. I did all of my charging at home. It was rated at 240 miles of range, which we all know is driving under about 45 mph. When you go up to California freeway speeds of 70 mph, that range is reduced to about 170 miles. So I made a point of never going anyw
      • > I'm in favor of the government ending subsidies for
        > the sale of electric vehicles AND the oil industry.

        Sure. But let's make things truly fair. End the subsidies* to the oil industry and the auto makers that supported it now. But before ending subsidies for electrics, total up the sum of the subsidies* that were given to the dinosaur burners, and continue to subsidize electrics until that sum is spent. THEN you will see how they measure up, fairly and purely, with their respective merits.

        *And I m

  • by superdave80 ( 1226592 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:20PM (#64175287)
    If we can get inductive road charging working, this will make the range issue irrelevant. A few test roads are up and running right now. If this takes off, you won't need giant battery packs for trucks and cars, and an EV transition will be much easier.
    • Inductive takes way too much resources, litz wire ain't cheap. Roads are expensive, but even by that metric it would be a problem.

      Capacitive, maybe ... shame about the required voltages.

      • Inductive takes way too much resources

        Despite us being in just the early testing phase, you have decided with absolutely no information that it will take 'too much resources'? That was quick...

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      So to have a tiny reduction in total emissions, we need to have a massive increase in infrastructure emissions.

    • That's WAY too inefficient, and not only for the charging itself but also for the needed infrastructure and maintenance.

      • So, what is the efficiency of roadway inductive charging? And given we haven't built more than a few test roads, I'm amazed that you have already declared them to take too much maintenance.
    • Why do people focus on inductive charging when overhead catenary already works efficiently and reliably to transfer megawatts of power at up to 200+mph, with low maintenance, for electric trains?

      Why a solution that doesn't exist when there's already a solution that does exist?
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The only issue with catenary is that if the pantograph is not in good condition, it can damage them. Obviously train operators keep their equipment in good condition, but random truckers...

        I think it's really unnecessary though. Battery swaps are faster than fuelling up with dino juice, and very high power charging is fine if you have to attend to the usual human needs like food and bathroom breaks.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      High power charging and battery swaps will be the answer I think. In Europe, drivers have to take breaks anyway (legal requirement) so charging is fine, and in the US where it's a bit more Mad Max style they can swap batteries over in about 5 minutes with an automated system.

      Nio has been doing battery swaps in Norway and China for a few years now, takes 6 minutes.

    • That's not necessary. I don't recall the exact hours, but the DoT restricts the number of hours a trucker can drive before a mandatory 8-hour rest period. And the last time I did an interstate road trip, I saw a number of trucks with stickers on the back of the trailer saying something like: "Speed limited to 65 MPH." I'm not sure if it's the governors are on the engines due to government mandate or policy from freight companies who want to limit their liability. But they are there.

      So it becomes a matte

      • So it becomes a matter of simple arithmetic... the number of already-limited driving hours allowed per day times the speed limit already programmed into the trucks. If it's 8 hours and 65 MPH, you get 520 miles. And that's all the range they need, since they have to pull into a truck stop for a rest period anyway. And, although I wasn't actively looking for them, I'm sure I noticed truck stops more frequently than 520 miles my road trip. So just replace the pumps at the truck stops with chargers, and we're done.

        Many long haul routes have two drivers in the truck who take turns driving and resting in the sleeper. Modern sleeper cabs also have RV style toilets, microwaves and fridges, TV and internet. They stop for fuel and nothing else. These are the ones you don't see at truck stops. You want your fruits and veggies to arrive fresh don't you?

  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @03:31PM (#64175307) Homepage Journal

    The quotes from the truckers are just like what you hear from any other EV driver. Very few want to ever drive anything else. When we got our first EV, we found that my wife and I worked to schedule all our activities so that we didn't have to drive the other car any more than necessary.

    Just like with other EVs, the range can be an issue. Lack of charging infrastructure can be an issue. Price can be an issue. But all of those are much less so now than ten years ago when EVs were really new, just like trucks are now. Transition rules are for a decade out or more, so there's plenty of time for those issues to be addressed.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Does anyone wait for 10 hours to get help on the road anywhere in the USA any more? If your car is old enough that it doesn't have some cellular or satellite thing to call for help then certainly someone in the vehicle has a cell phone of some recent vintage. If the phone is new enough it's got satellite communications to cover the few cellular dead spots.

        You did mention overloaded towing services but that's still a stretch for me. I've lived in the Midwest and if there's a need for tow trucks then there

  • [emphasis mine]

    ... many drivers have reported that the new vehicles are easier on their bodies — thanks to both less rocking off the cab, assisted steering and the quiet motor.

    - 66-year-old Marty Boots: Diesel was like a college wrestler. And the electric is like a ballet dancer... You get back into diesel and it's like, 'What's wrong with this thing?' Why is it making so much noise? Why is it so hard to steer?"

    So diesel semi tractors don't have power/assisted steering? Seems weird.

    • Re:Raises hand ... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Pinky's Brain ( 1158667 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @04:50PM (#64175507)

      On the EV it's probably electronic, on the diesel it's probably some mechanical design industry settled on 50 years ago and stuck with ... unless it's some ladieda European truck no self respecting American trucker would drive.

  • by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @05:39PM (#64175561)

    How about this idea? Don't put permanent batteries in the trailers. However, start building trailers with spaces underneath for modular batteries, and just include the bays and the wiring for those batteries. That way, the extra cost for those trailers is minimized, and trucks can work with any type of trailer. Depending on the weight for a specific route, more or fewer batteries can be added. For a long route with relatively light cargo, extra batteries can be added. This also has the advantage of potentially charging batteries separately. Since we're talking about fleets owned by a single owner, the issue of modular swappable batteries circulating among different owners isn't problematic.

  • The current model where a single driver takes a load the entire distance is driven by the high power transfer of the diesel fuel pump making refueling time low. However, we are now at the next limit of human endurance safely driving the truck.

    If 1 hour charging gets you 6 hours driving, you then schedule drivers in 6 hour segments where they drop the trailer, pull their tractor into a charging bay, go into the truck stop restaurant to have lunch, then pick up a different trailer to go back they way they cam

    • As you hint at, this is a non-issue for local hauling (under 250mi/day), which the vast majority is.

      In the cases where this is potentially an issue - long hauling - understand that the vast majority of those are independent drivers or small companies with a handful of trucks. (Fun fact: there are nearly 2 million trucking companies in the US.)

      These are not fleets where they have dozens or hundreds of drivers that are interchangeable for a particular route. What you propose would require an absurd level of l

  • >"thanks to both less rocking off the cab, assisted steering and the quiet motor."

    Only one of those (quiet) will be directly due to being electric. You can design to do the other two in an ICE truck, if desired.

    >"mandating a switch to electric or emissions-free trucks by 2042, is happening too fast."

    If it is economical and/or has significant benefits, it will happen on its own. If the technology isn't there, then it is just silly to "mandate" it.

    >"There's other concerns"

    That is a plural construct

    • The geometry and lack of an engine dramatically reduce vibrations. The benefit of the regulated phase-out being published is that it helps companies with capital planning for long-lived assets and supporting infrastructure.

  • Trucker comfort really does matter. I would never have predicted the jump to automatic transmissions, but they're very common now. Not having to go to fuel stops, pump fuel, do the math to see how much you can take to stay weight legal, and to sit in line to wait for your comcheck to clear makes a big difference. It sounds 10/10 to me.

    Charging is going to be an issue, so until you get infrastructure deployed it's likely to be just home-every-night runs, but that's a *lot* of trucking. For EV trucks this

  • Despite all the electronic abstractions, your will as a driver is translated much more faithfully in an EV than in any ICE that's not a sports car. I suppose truckers with the good fortune to try one out are having a similar revelation.
  • Yeah, I spent a million bucks on a new truck. No way am I going to say I was an idiot.

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