Efthreeoh
Active Member
- First Name
- IKE
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2024
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 34
- Reaction score
- 29
- Location
- Timbucktoo
- Vehicles
- Fordson
I'm glad you brought up the Volt. I never owned one but a drove seveal and when the ICE kicked in to provide the power source. There was no noticeable loss of performance with the Volt in gas mode. The Gen 1 Volt had a 149 HP that was more than adequate to power the electric motor and charge the battery. Interesting was the planetary gearset to have the engine power the drive wheels when necessary.Hi, we think alike so wanted to give you my thoughts and concerns. First of all, I have put a deposit down for the Traveler with Range Extender so am really keeping my fingers crossed (with cash) that this range extender is more like you described. However, I now have my doubts after reading a few posts and even comments on YouTube. First, I believe getting the range extender option is going to put a damper on our pure EV performance. Mainly because Scout indicates that option will mean a smaller battery pack, plus likely a hit on weight. Further proof is on their website or video with an asterisk by the EV Option indicating *For optimum EV performance… Anyway, all of this points to worse acceleration and EV range, the two things I care deeply about. How much worse will likely impact if I keep this extender option or not.
However, my biggest concern and what likely may be a deal breaker for many, is what the Range Extender will do for us. I am a former 1st Generation Chevy Volt owner (actually was on a waiting list for the first year model so am very use to this early adaptor hobby). Anyway, GM did a horrible job marketing the Volt as it was truly two cars in one due to its ability to 100% run on gas or electric charge. And believe it or not, this actually worked very well. Just like your hoping for the Scout, you could simply keep feeding it gas and drive across country and back just like a regular ICE car while zooming by those Superchargers. Then once you got home, charge at home for all those daily routine trips and forget how to pump gas. So, when the Scout was revealed with this “Range Extender” option, I immediately got excited this would be similar to our Volt! But now I am hearing that the engine will not be powerful enough to sustain this large battery at a level that could fully propel the vehicle, meaning that all this range extender will do, is simply extend how long you can use said battery before it gets to the point it needs to be recharged the typical EV way, which sounds like is around 500 miles. I guess the jury is still out, but it doesn’t sound like Scout has defined it to operate how the Volt did. I think this would be a big missed opportunity as it would pull in so many new potential EV owners that aren’t fully ready to wean off gas. In a sense, the Volt allowed me to do that too as I eventually replaced it with a full EV (Mach E) and now have enjoyed maintenance free driving in 36K miles of ownership with that 3.5 sec acceleration (I have the GT perf. version). So if the range extender will not give us the option to fully use gas while also taking a hit on EV performance, I will not hesitate to drop it for the full EV version. After owning both, I feel very comfortable going full EV but I also know having that Range Extender would likely help resale ability so checked it mostly for that reason. Time well tell right!
The i3 was a different design philosophy (suited for Europe) for the ICE to power the car home or to a charging station.
I see Scout Motors taking the Volt series hybrid approach, which is RAM's approach as well, to sustain the EV drivetrain with enough power to tow continuously, but without the mechanical link to the drivewheels. My hope is Scout does not source an existing automobile engine and repurpose it for the generator application. For cost reasons that was GM's approach for the Volt. A clean sheet engine would be the best design solution; let's hope the budget is there for it.