Taking this thought experiment a step further...So lots of discussions, but most seem to talk like there is a one size fits all - i.e. it only works one way. I would like to see it have "modes" like my F150 and a lot of other vehicles these days. Something like this:
- "Eco mode": might reduce acceleration or use only some of the motors, have a speed limiter, may lower the air suspension (I think Rivian does this suspension trick, not sure if Scout even has it?), turn off the Harvester, etc to maximize pure EV range.
- "Normal mode": i.e. the 500 mile range, with Harvester kicking in at 20% charge or whatever.
- "Tow/Haul/Max Range mode": Harvester runs all the time charging the batteries and feeding electricity direct to the motors, to maximize range/mimimize battery drain, esp when towing or hauling. (Maybe even detects a connected trailer and turns this on by default when towing)
- "Charge mode": (just throwing this in the mix) - where it can sit still and run the harvester to charge batteries while not driving, say while I stop to eat lunch but no charging stations around. (Ppl have expressed concerns about this running in a closed garage, but having something like a carbon monoxide detector, prompt the user to not run this in an enclosed space, or sensors to detect if it's surrounded by walls/roof, etc to disable this - I'm fine with having to park out and away from things to run this mode. Note: stupid ppl will be stupid - there's nothing that prevents turning on an ICE engine in a closed garage, so it doesn't really create a "new" risk, unless it turns this on automatically when it needs juice, so it would almost have to be a person manually turning this on)
I feel like this would give the best of all worlds - 99% of the time as a daily driver, it's pure EV, but on those long trips or when towing, it makes the most use of the gas engine to extend that range.
Looking at max driving range before I am stuck, if all I have access to is gas - no charging stations (probably unrealistic but thinking worst case for an EV noob like me that has no experience with charging stations on the road).
Lets say if I tow in "Normal mode" and (making up numbers), I get ~150 miles of towing range with a full battery and gas tank (lets assume towing reduces range by 2/3rds or so, so 50 miles EV + ~100 miles gas+ev), and then have to gas up and charge up.
But lets say in "Tow/Max range mode", if I can go 100 miles with Harvester running the entire time and run out of gas, but still have 80% of battery, then I fill up the gas, go another 100 miles with battery to 60%, and can do this (theoretically) 4-5 times before I have to stop for gas and charge, and get 400-500 miles of towing that way (and even more without towing), I would be good with that.
If some of the information/speculation I've seen is right, and it can go 150 miles on pure EV (lets assume 50 miles towing), and lets say harvester in "Normal mode" kicks in at 20% battery for another 350 miles (lets speculate 20% battery + a full tank of gas gives us ~100 miles towing, I'm thinking I may not be too far off, and could in theory go 1300-1400 miles between charges, with multiple gas fillups when not towing - that 500 miles, I believe, is range without filling up electrons or gas.) Probably the absolute worse use of an EV vehicle, but this is an extreme use case for maximizing a charge, not using it efficiently.
If at the end of that (say I'm at a campsite in the boonies), I fill up gas and can use "Charge mode" to get that battery recharged, then fill up the gas tank and start over (even a partial charge to get me to a real charger), I think that would completely resolve my range anxiety.
In most cases (for me) a trip will not be 500 miles or whatever, so if I get to my destination (that campsite in the boonies) with 30% battery and can run in "Charge mode" to get it to more like 60-80%, that'll get me back to civilization in most cases (maybe even enough to get me home) - a typical camping trip for me is no further than 200 miles from home (usually less), so the only charger I'd have to use is theoretically my home charger, when I get home. And even on longer trips, it's highly unlikely for me to drive more than 400-500 miles in one day, so if I drive that much, then park and put it in "Charge mode" and gas up the next morning, I feel like this would be very doable.
In normal day to day driving, even towing locally, I'd be well within the pure EV range, 95% of the time. Granted, that's my driving patterns, yours may vary.
This is 100% speculation, and admittedly, I'm a complete EV noob and no idea what I am talking about, so my ideas and numbers may be completely unrealistic, but I have to believe there are a lot of ways to skin this cat. For all we know, that 500 mile range is already doing this to get there (if harvester kicks in at 50% or more, for example, that would pretty much shoot this down).