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Power Transportation Businesses Technology

Tesla's Electric Semi Truck Will Reportedly Get 200-300 Miles Per Charge (reuters.com) 322

According to Reuters, Tesla next month plans to unveil an electric big-rig truck with a working range of 200 to 300 miles, a sign that the company is targeting regional hauling for its entry into the commercial freight market. From the report: Chief Executive Elon Musk has promised to release a prototype of its Tesla Semi truck next month in a bid to expand the company's market beyond luxury cars. The entrepreneur has tantalized the trucking industry with the prospect of a battery-powered heavy-duty vehicle that can compete with conventional diesels, which can travel up to 1,000 miles on a single tank of fuel. Tesla's electric prototype will be capable of traveling the low end of what transportation veterans consider to be "long-haul" trucking, according to Scott Perry, an executive at Miami-based fleet operator Ryder System. Perry said he met with Tesla officials earlier this year to discuss the technology at the automaker's manufacturing facility in Fremont, California.
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Tesla's Electric Semi Truck Will Reportedly Get 200-300 Miles Per Charge

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  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Thursday August 24, 2017 @09:38PM (#55079961) Homepage

    I can see a big need for intra-city hauling of trailers. 100 mile range (with less than 20 minute charge times) would probably be adequate and it would help build the infrastructure for electric vehicles in cities.

    It also proves the technology and helps it evolve into longer range tractors. 1,000 miles is 16+ hours of driving, which I don't think is legal in most states/provinces, but 400 to 500 probably is reasonable to allow the driver time to stretch, have a meal, rest, shower while the tractor is recharging. I suspect the 1,000 mile range is to minimize fuel costs which is less of an issue with an electric tractor which should be able to plug in at multiple truck stops.

    The technology won't be perfect from the starting gate, but Tesla will learn and be able to build better tractors down the road.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      In Europe the law requires drivers to take regular breaks. Details here: https://ec.europa.eu/transport... [europa.eu]

      As such, a 200-300 mile range wouldn't even slow them down as long as they didn't have queue for charging too much. The law is strictly enforced too, with vehicles being fitted with devices to monitor compliance.

      In any case, it's only a matter of a few years until they go fully antonymous anyway.

  • These trucks (well the diesel counterparts there are no details available I've found) can haul 80k lbs so a larger lithium battery isn't an issue because it's heavy. The main problem is it's still too damn expensive. Hopefully this will come down soon. Charging will be dirt cheap but a new battery will likely cost 50-80k USD before subsidy and won't last long if the vehicle is used commercially, much less than a car. It will be interesting to see what the true cost of ownership is after a decade of real
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Charging will be dirt cheap but a new battery will likely cost 50-80k USD before subsidy and won't last long if the vehicle is used commercially, much less than a car.

      $80k is about 40 trips worth of diesel fuel in Europe. If the truck can make 80 trips before the battery wears out (and that's a lousy estimate). If it costs $1k to charge the battery then parity is achieved. If it can make more than 80 trips and costs less than $1k to charge the battery, then it is a net saving.

      I think a modern LiFePo battery can take more than 80 charges. I have no idea how much it would actually cost to charge a battery for one of these things, but the fact that they are going into produ

  • by Tom ( 822 )

    With proper logistics planning, the recharge is actually not a problem. You just time the operations nicely, or even use the loading/unloading times for (partial) recharges.

  • by linuxguy ( 98493 ) on Thursday August 24, 2017 @10:06PM (#55080091) Homepage

    I live not too far from highway. I usually cannot hear cars. But large trucks, yeah I hear them. And I guess I am breathing what they are putting out as well. I cannot wait for electric semis to become popular. Sure, in the early days, with a 300-mile limit, it will be a regional solution. But I'll take what I can get. As another poster noted, Seattle is about 150 miles from Portland, OR. An electric truck from Portland could travel to Seattle, charge while being unloaded and then be able to make the trip back. And I suspect most of the trucks on Hwy 26 near me are regional.

    Electric semis? Get them on the road ASAP please.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Thursday August 24, 2017 @10:26PM (#55080177)

    Perfect opportunity to develop swapable battery packs.

  • Even a typical local truck is running 300-400 per day.
    More importantly than "... a battery-powered heavy-duty vehicle that can compete with conventional diesels, which can travel up to 1,000 miles on a single tank of fuel...." is that diesel can fill up in about 20 mins. It doesn't take 12 hours to fill the tank.

  • Since when did trucks sit around for extended periods of time?
    The trailers, sure.
    A lof of privately owned trucks are owned by a partnership of two or more drivers who work in shifts so the truck is on the road 90% of the time. When it's not moving, their capital investment isn't making them any money.

    Even in little old back-water NZ, where you can't actually drive 1000 miles without ending up in an ocean and drivers have strict limits as to how long they're allowed to drive each day, trucks don't sit around

    • Less Than Truckload (LTL) carriers on regional routes might work, and local routes would be easy.

  • by oic0 ( 1864384 ) on Thursday August 24, 2017 @11:08PM (#55080329)
    You're all super focused on the range. Tesla has not said anything about the range. Some guy gave his theory. Now you're all jumping on that and either crapping on them or supporting them.
  • Toyota Puts Fuel-Cell Semi Truck to Test at Los Angeles Port April 19, 2017 https://www.bloomberg.com/news... [bloomberg.com] The newest heavy-duty truck set to operate at the Port of Los Angeles emits an unusual byproduct that California could certainly use more of: water. Toyota Motor Corp.’s hydrogen fuel-cell truck, which will emit nothing but vapor, will begin a feasibility study at the port this summer. The Japanese automaker unveiled the concept Wednesday and will start testing it in short-distance fleets t

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