That is the 500 mile Question!I expect that will be configurable by the driver. If I prefer to keep the battery charged and therefore run the engine before it reaches 150 miles, I should be able to select when the engine turns on. Many plug-in hybrids have that capability. So they say.
And . . .?Didn't see this stat being talked about but Scout confirmed to The Autopian publication that the Harvester gas engine range extender will start charging the battery after about 100-150 miles of driving EV mode only.
I feel that's a fair distance. For most people, they'll never use gas for 90% of their driving.Didn't see this stat being talked about but Scout confirmed to The Autopian publication that the Harvester gas engine range extender will start charging the battery after about 100-150 miles of driving EV mode only.
Hope there's an option. To not use it unless needed.Didn't see this stat being talked about but Scout confirmed to The Autopian publication that the Harvester gas engine range extender will start charging the battery after about 100-150 miles of driving EV mode only.
You can update your reservation on the website. From truck to SUV, or harvester or not. I added the Harvester after the original reservation but it's so early I need to understand more about how it works before I really make up my mind.I wonder if they will let you change the configuration. I picked EV only but this option depending on how it works, cost, maintenance is intriguing.
I remember when I had pre ordered the Rivian everyone was worried that you would be placed back in the queue if you changed your configuration.You can update your reservation on the website. From truck to SUV, or harvester or not. I added the Harvester after the original reservation but it's so early I need to understand more about how it works before I really make up my mind.
For many who own or are considering an BEV, anything over 150 miles in a day is unusual. The farthest we go is the 140 miles to our cabin in Northern MN. We have a Tesla that is almost a decade old that has 150k miles on it and one of the best things about it other than the acceleration is that we’ve spent very little on maintenance and repairs. Much less than any ICE vehicle we’ve owned for 100K+ miles. We’ve also saved about $15k on fuel costs since we bought it in early 2015.I'd be willing to bet this means the EREV Versions will receive a smaller battery pack than the EV only trucks. so 100-150 miles between generator kick on.. 500 total. so in 500 miles the generator could run 3-5 times charging the battery back up.
Which is awesome really... minus road trips my ICE GEN will hardly ever kick on. 100-150 miles would do anything I can imagine in a day.
Not disagreeing with you, but my current roundtrip commute is just over 100 miles to the office, not including any job site visits.For many who own or are considering an BEV, anything over 150 miles in a day is unusual. The farthest we go is the 140 miles to our cabin in Northern MN. We have a Tesla that is almost a decade old that has 150k miles on it and one of the best things about it other than the acceleration is that we’ve spent very little on maintenance and repairs. Much less than any ICE vehicle we’ve owned for 100K+ miles. We’ve also saved about $15k on fuel costs since we bought it in early 2015.
I reserved the Harvester version but may change my mind once we have more details. The hardest part is the the 2.5+ year wait we will all have for the Scout. My Bronco that was reserved in July of 2020 didn’t get delivered until February of 2023.