astricklin

Active Member
First Name
Andrew
Joined
Oct 24, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
32
Reaction score
28
Location
Dallas
Vehicles
99 Mercury mountaineer
Country flag
I currently have a 4500lbs camper trailer and also have a livestock/horse trailer. I don't really see myself traveling across country with them so I think even having 150 ish miles before having to charge will be sufficient so I reserved EV only. However I may change my mind once specs and pricing is announced. If 150 mile battery with harvester is $20k less than the top battery only range, I may change my mind.

As is, I don't want to have to deal with the gas motor maintenance for something that I may really need once a year or less.
 

Timmdodge60

Active Member
First Name
Tim
Joined
Oct 26, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
29
Reaction score
47
Location
Orlando
Vehicles
Lexus RX350
Country flag
I reserved a Terra EV only. I'll mostly be towing a small kayak with associated gear in rack mounted carriers on a light trailer at a distance of no more than about 150 miles in one day. The trailer only reduces my current ICE vehicle's fuel mileage by about 2 MPG so I don't think the Harvester range extender will be necessary.
DSC_3192.JPG
 
OP
OP
Foobar

Foobar

Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2022
Threads
1
Messages
24
Reaction score
44
Location
New York
Vehicles
'23 Rivian R1T, '19 Tesla Model 3P, '22 Energica Eva Ribelle
Country flag
I reserved a Terra EV only. I'll mostly be towing a small kayak with associated gear in rack mounted carriers on a light trailer at a distance of no more than about 150 miles in one day. The trailer only reduces my current ICE vehicle's fuel mileage by about 2 MPG so I don't think the Harvester range extender will be necessary.
DSC_3192.JPG
Yeah - most of the range degradation in EV towing comes from aerodynamics, in my experience. That setup doesn't look like it's going to a huge amount of drag.
 

4sallypat

Well-Known Member
First Name
Pat
Joined
Oct 27, 2024
Threads
1
Messages
45
Reaction score
40
Location
Southern California
Vehicles
'23 MME delivered May '23 + '22 Lightning July '22
Country flag
I am, in fact, very concerned about this. If I'm not able to tow with the harvester without charging frequently, then I may decide against going with the Scout and just keep my Rivian. As it stands, I already stop every 2 hours for half an hour of charging with the Rivian+Airstream combo. I need to see something significantly better than that either with a larger battery pack, a range extender that can sustain the towing, or a faster charging capability. The Scout with Harvester, in theory, should get me two of those. In practice, I'll need to see what it actually equates to in real-world performance. I'm hoping that Scout recognizes this use-case and is aiming to address it.
Agree - if Scout does not offer a newer battery tech, then I may skip out.

I had a Lightning F150 EV for a year and found the NCM batteries just do not have enough range, slow to charge based on 400V pack.

Hoping that Scout chooses a new battery tech like solid state or at least use 800V with LFP packs as a minimum.
 

Benbean66

New Member
First Name
Ben
Joined
Oct 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
4
Reaction score
2
Location
PA
Vehicles
1973 Honda CB350, '88 RHD YJ, '88 YJ, 2020 JT Spor
Country flag
Mileage while towing has been my biggest fear with these EV’s. My DIY overlanding trailer (dubbed the “Hill-Tonne”) only weighs 2K lbs, but we do a lot of off-roading while out and about, and that’s after roughly 300-350 miles. Anxious to see what the real world numbers end up being. I have my name in for a Traveler with Harvester range extender. For as much as I love my pickups, I would like the option to keep the dogs in the vehicle with us, and not in the bed.

20240831_151025_Original.jpeg
 
Last edited:

Opus

Member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Oct 30, 2024
Threads
1
Messages
8
Reaction score
7
Vehicles
f150
Country flag
I don't tow often, but when I do, it'll be a 16' open trailer with a Mule or a load of mulch (generally only a few miles), or a 26ft Surveyor Legend 240BHLE camper (5100lbs unloaded, up to 5800 lbs loaded, plus ppl and gear in the bed - so figure up to around 7000lbs max). 200 miles to a campground is a reasonable expectation, but we took a trip last year from Maryland to Maine, and are thinking about other similar trips (maybe one of these a year). So Harvester capabilities are a big factor.
 

Jrgunn5150

Active Member
First Name
J.R.
Joined
Nov 4, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
34
Reaction score
31
Location
Ionia Mi
Vehicles
A bunch
Country flag
Trailer is 1700, TDI 4runner is 4200. Also have a 78 C10 that's about 3400, and a 88 D100 that's also about 3400.

20230929_162513.jpg
 

nikoniko

New Member
First Name
John
Joined
Oct 28, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
4
Reaction score
2
Location
Washington
Vehicles
‘23 Model Y Performance, ‘24 Model Y Performance, ‘20 6.7 SuperDuty Tremor
Country flag
Whatever the super duty can’t tow when the camping trailer is attached.
 

DustyRide

Member
First Name
Dustin
Joined
Oct 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
7
Reaction score
14
Location
Arroyo Grande, CA
Vehicles
2004 Nissan Titan, 2020 Nissan Armada, 2021 Toyota Camry
Country flag
My travel trailer has a GVWR of 7,600 lbs.

20160410_160923.jpg


I tow it once/month within 100 miles round-trip, and then a couple times a year 250-300 one-way (but @ those locations for 10+ days, so plenty of opportunities to plug-in).

I do a mix of glamping and dry-camping with the trailer, but I also take just my truck out into Forest Service/BLM for dispersed camping. It will be great to leave the generator behind since the noise always counteracts the idea of dry-camping to me. I had thought about adding solar/inverter on the trailer to have a better source than my Jackery, but the Terra will solve that.

When I retire I plan on upgrading to a 40'+ 5th wheel and a one-ton truck... at which point the Scout will retire to commuting, surfboard/mtn bike transport, & overlanding trips.
 

jsprunty

New Member
First Name
jeffery
Joined
Oct 29, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
3
Reaction score
2
Location
Bend Oregon
Vehicles
2024 suburban 2007 range rover 1965 land rover pickup
Country flag
Nothing too heavy

IMG_3287.jpeg


70709896770__7D4BBBC0-1076-45DC-84AE-D65AC6F477D1.jpeg


IMG_0578.jpeg


IMG_0717.jpeg
 

Mousehunter

Active Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
41
Reaction score
32
Location
South Texas
Vehicles
F250,, LJ, Golf TDI, Tacoma
Country flag
poor English apparently. Albeit is probably the word I was intending. "All though" is what I meant - not adding and abetting.
 

ygrignon

New Member
First Name
Yanik
Joined
Oct 24, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
1
Reaction score
5
Location
Georgetown, TX
Vehicles
JT Sport S Max Tow, Maserati Ghibli, Audi Q5
Country flag
I am, in fact, very concerned about this. If I'm not able to tow with the harvester without charging frequently, then I may decide against going with the Scout and just keep my Rivian. As it stands, I already stop every 2 hours for half an hour of charging with the Rivian+Airstream combo. I need to see something significantly better than that either with a larger battery pack, a range extender that can sustain the towing, or a faster charging capability. The Scout with Harvester, in theory, should get me two of those. In practice, I'll need to see what it actually equates to in real-world performance. I'm hoping that Scout recognizes this use-case and is aiming to address it.
I live in central Texas and going anywhere else takes forever. I currently tow an Airstream International 23FB (GVWR 6000lb) with my Jeep Gladiator. The Jeep is a little underpowered when going up grades. However I can do about 180 miles on a gas tank. Just this summer we went all the way to Acadia National Park in Maine for a total of 6k miles. I definitely need long distance towing capability and definitely hope the Terra with Harvester range extender can support that use case.
IMG_9373.jpeg
 
Last edited:
 
Top