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Cummins Unveils Electric Semi Truck Before Tesla (autoblog.com)

Cummins has beat Tesla to the punch by unveiling its own electric semi truck. According to Forbes, the fully electric, class 7 day-cab urban hauler, called Aeos, gets 100 miles of range from its 140-kWh battery pack and can haul a 22-ton trailer. While the company does offer the options of additional battery packs to triple the range or a range-extending engine generator, the Aeos is better suited for city use rather than long-haul trucking. Autoblog reports: While this electric truck is a concept, it's a working demonstration of a product Cummins plans to start producing in 2019. At the unveiling in Columbus, Ind., Cummins also revealed its latest near-zero-emissions natural gas engines, as well as the X15 and lightweight X12 clean diesel engines. The company said it is embracing new technologies that allow its customers to contribute to a sustainable future.

5 of 264 comments (clear)

  1. it's just another prototype. by pezpunk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    we've seen hundreds of Tesla-killer prototypes and promises. What we haven't seen to date, though, is a company other than Tesla who can actually deliver a production electric vehicle that people really want to drive.

    disclosure: i'm a Tesla owner (and it's by far the best vehicle i've ever owned by an extremely wide margin)

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    1. Re:it's just another prototype. by Rei · · Score: 5, Interesting

      BMW owners used to say the same thing about their "ultimate" vehicle (right before it started a never-ending journey into repair shops)

      Given that the person's Tesla will have a 8 year / unlimited mileage warranty on the battery pack and drive unit....

      No, those aren't the only things that can break in a vehicle (the rest is 4 years / 50k miles), but just pointing out, Tesla's warranty coverage on the S and X is superb. And it didn't come with the 8 year / unlimited mileage warranty on the drive unit - they added that in for free to all owners when the early drive units started having bearing issues. I mean, what sort of company does that? And they generally go ahead and replace any early drive units if they make any sound at all, just as a precaution to avoid any problems down the road that might be past the warranty period.

      In case you're curious, the battery packs have held up amazingly well - even in heavy service like taxi duty in harsh climates. The relatively small number of battery replacements have been almost exclusively nothing to do with the packs themselves, but a switch / connector on them. As mentioned further down in the thread (with a link to data), typical degradation for a Tesla pack is about 4% in the first year of ownership, and then it slows down greatly, with typical 5-year degradation at around 6-7%. Which is pretty much the sort of "range degradation" you'll see in a gasoline vehicle as well, since gas engines become less efficient with age and thus you don't go as far on a fixed-size tank. The primary difference being that gasoline vehicle tanks are primarily sized to minimize how infrequently you have to through the inconvenience of detouring from your daily life to go to a gas station, while EVs start each day with a full charge and the concept of "range" doesn't even come into play unless you go on a road trip - wherein a Tesla, that means "several hours of driving, then a lunch break, then back on the road for several hours more driving..." etc. Depending on the model, a 10 minute bathroom/stretch break when stopped at a supercharger means another hour or so of range. A half-hour stop to eat means about 2 1/2 hours more range. In short, it's only a minor, leaves-you-properly-rested-like-you're-supposed-to-be slowdown on long trips, while in your everyday life it means you never even have to think about whether you have to detour from your schedule to go stand outside at a place full of carcinogenic evaporating gas drips and exhaust fumes while paying out the nose for fuel.

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      He's just being nice so my real father won't freeze him in carbonite and sell him for spice.
    2. Re: it's just another prototype. by Rei · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, the "fuel" that Tesla runs on is the fact that the market thinks it has massive profit potential, and has consequently pumped capital into it valuing the company as one of the world's largest automakers based on said profit potential.

      But then again, random Slashdotters living in their moms' basements disagree, so clearly major capital funds and their due diligence analysis of the company's financials are wrong.

      Note: there is a wide spread on the value guidance from different investors on Tesla - it's one of the curious market stories of our time. These figures generally range from bulls who think it should be around $200 to bears who think it should be around $450. But even with TSLA at $200, it would still be a massive company.

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      He's just being nice so my real father won't freeze him in carbonite and sell him for spice.
    3. Re: it's just another prototype. by rtb61 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You will far more likely find those employed by the fossil fuel industry targeting Tesla and any other electric vehicle manufacturer, with propaganda. People seem to forget, electric vehicles will bankrupt large portions of the fossil fuel industry. As more electric vehicles and renewables to power them, so demand for fossil fuel drops and with it drops the price and all the more expensive sources of fossil fuel, where producing the fuel, costs more than the fuel, then that company goes bankrupt, hundreds of billions will simply go belly up, floating in a sea of oil, no one wants. So not in mom's basement (which is a pretty nasty slander for children living with their parents) but trolls living in Public Relations Firms, paid to troll the internet, and more often than not, first posters, actively full time monitoring target forums with their lame targeted messages.

      I am surprised they were no jumping all over the trucks limited range but of course trailers with batteries, will fix that and you can simply drop off the trailer with the load and pick up another fully charged empty trailer or a loaded one going some where else. Cummins also launched, near-zero-emissions natural gas engines, "X15 and lightweight X12 clean diesel engines". Tesla likely forced their hand with their electric semi and they added to the launch for those other fossil fuellers, sort of the last hurrah of the infernal combustion engine, the old and new at the one opening.

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  2. Other company by DrYak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What we haven't seen to date, though, is a company other than Tesla who can actually deliver a production electric vehicle that people really want to drive.

    Like Renault ? Who's been putting electric vehicles on the market for quite some time (cooperating with Nissan) (Covering a whole range of uses cases: Twizzy, Zoe, Megan, Kangoo)
    Like Citroen ? Whose electric truck have been used by French postal services since the 90s ? (who needs extreme range when 20km is about as far as a your regular delivery route goes ?)

    On the other hand: all of the above are European manufacturer, and Europe's densely populated cities are just ripe for EV (even back when these used to have ridiculously short ranges), and lots of country have electricity production that doesn't even rely on burning fossils.

    What Tesla managed is to find a way to make it marketable in the US, mostly by a combination of getting around US' "range anxiety" problems (mostly using off-the-shelf cells for the batteries, and integrating as much as possible the production to keep the costs low even with the ginormous battery) and doing very well executed marketing campaign (they managed to make the cars look sexy in their consumers' minds).

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