broncoaz
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2022
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 445
- Reaction score
- 393
- Location
- Cape Cod, MA
- Vehicles
- 2021 Bronco 2 door Badlands manual
- Thread starter
- #1
I sold my 2022 Lightning Pro today. I really liked almost everything about the truck, but the cost of utilities in eastern Massachusetts made the truck less appealing for me. When I was running cost estimates on the Lighting I was using 14.9 cents per kWh as my baseline electricity cost, I had asked my wife for the number off the bill and she gave me the cost of electricity, not including the cost of distribution. Upon reviewing the bill after taking delivery of my truck in September I found that we are paying 34.1 cents per kWh for electricity and distribution, our bill for 941 kWh was $320.80. When I lived in AZ I was paying about 10 cents per kWh, my survey here showed 68.7% of respondents were under 15 cents/kWh. https://www.f150lightningforum.com/...-pay-per-kwh-at-home.12567/page-5#post-268090 I havenāt been able to get an answer from my utility on why electricity is so expensive here and if anything can be done to reduce the bill. The governor signed a bill in August 2022 requiring utilities to develop a time of use plan, there is no date for implementation. I looked at putting solar on my home, but itās about $50K up front for what Iād need to power the truck and a power wall, supposedly Iāll get back all but $12K in 5 years time. Spending more than the cost of the truck on solar now is not appealing since Iām looking for another house.
The net of the high costs means Iām saving about 20% vs my 2021 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 diesel work truck getting 27 mpg. 20% isnāt nothing, but at 14.9 cents/kWh I was saving 60% compared to the diesel. At the end of the day the 20% saving isnāt enough to go from a 650 mile range with 5 minute fill ups to a ~200 mile range with necessary 30-40 minute stops for DCFC on days I drive farther. If I drove less in a day I wouldāve opted to keep the Lightning, but Iām pushing the 160 mile mark 2-3 days per week. The expected winter range drop would make my situation worse, and likely making the EV more expensive than diesel. To top that off the utilities here have asked for a 64% increase in electric rates that should be decided on next month. My truck is heading to the Midwest to a guy paying 9 cents per kWh and less overnight, he will save a bunch of money compared to gasoline.
Iām a fleet manager for a construction company with 150 trucks, I bought the Lightning personally to test the concept for the company. With government mandates for no new ICE vehicles by 2035 (MA follows CA rules) I wanted the data and knowledge on what EVās are currently capable of. As this point in MA with the electricity prices 2-4x what most people are paying in other states I canāt recommend electric vehicles for our fleet. Aside from the costs, many of our drivers run 200+ miles in a day and tow 14ā enclosed trailers. I have a 2023 Bolt EUV on order for one of our drivers, now Iām debating on canceling. Iāll have to check out the Bolt forum and get some data before I decide.
I am very glad I purchased and experienced the Lightning, itās an amazing vehicle and driving experience that I will miss. I am looking forward to what time and market competition will bring for EVās and more specifically battery technology in the next 5-10 years. Iām a huge advocate for EVās just not in my state right now due to the electric rates. I have notified my Chevy fleet guy that I want a Silverado EV as soon as they are available, and I have personal reservations for the Silverado EV and Tesla. I will reevaluate the energy price issue when the next truck is available.
My survey:
The net of the high costs means Iām saving about 20% vs my 2021 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 diesel work truck getting 27 mpg. 20% isnāt nothing, but at 14.9 cents/kWh I was saving 60% compared to the diesel. At the end of the day the 20% saving isnāt enough to go from a 650 mile range with 5 minute fill ups to a ~200 mile range with necessary 30-40 minute stops for DCFC on days I drive farther. If I drove less in a day I wouldāve opted to keep the Lightning, but Iām pushing the 160 mile mark 2-3 days per week. The expected winter range drop would make my situation worse, and likely making the EV more expensive than diesel. To top that off the utilities here have asked for a 64% increase in electric rates that should be decided on next month. My truck is heading to the Midwest to a guy paying 9 cents per kWh and less overnight, he will save a bunch of money compared to gasoline.
Iām a fleet manager for a construction company with 150 trucks, I bought the Lightning personally to test the concept for the company. With government mandates for no new ICE vehicles by 2035 (MA follows CA rules) I wanted the data and knowledge on what EVās are currently capable of. As this point in MA with the electricity prices 2-4x what most people are paying in other states I canāt recommend electric vehicles for our fleet. Aside from the costs, many of our drivers run 200+ miles in a day and tow 14ā enclosed trailers. I have a 2023 Bolt EUV on order for one of our drivers, now Iām debating on canceling. Iāll have to check out the Bolt forum and get some data before I decide.
I am very glad I purchased and experienced the Lightning, itās an amazing vehicle and driving experience that I will miss. I am looking forward to what time and market competition will bring for EVās and more specifically battery technology in the next 5-10 years. Iām a huge advocate for EVās just not in my state right now due to the electric rates. I have notified my Chevy fleet guy that I want a Silverado EV as soon as they are available, and I have personal reservations for the Silverado EV and Tesla. I will reevaluate the energy price issue when the next truck is available.
My survey:
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