Bills R Electric
Well-known member
- First Name
- TJ
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2023
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 216
- Reaction score
- 211
- Location
- Washington, DC
- Vehicles
- 2023 Ford Lightning Lariat
Charging speed.The CT seems much better in the aero department and should have a more efficient drive train but I'm not sure the 500 mile version will ever happen, the battery would just have to be massive. The lightning is about 2.4 m/kw with a 131 kwh battery so to get 500 it would need a 204 Kwh battery, which i think would weigh to much and take up to much space (although ram thinks they are going to try it). The CT is smaller but would still need 180 kwh battery to get to 500 (assuming about 2.8 m/kw which I think is on the high end of expectation).
Farley has been pushing charging speed and efficiency are more important than range and I think Tesla is very similar in that thought. If they put a 125 kwh battery in each CT vs a 180 kwh battery they can build almost 50% more batteries while also creating a scenario where you are more likely to need a supercharger more often, which is where they are really going to make money in the long run.
Either way I'm excited for tomorrow and getting more finalized info, the competition is good for the market and while i don't see a CT in my future (maybe a MY for the wife) I'm hoping it continues Tesla's success in driving the industry forward.
If you have lived with an EV for awhile, you realize yes having chargers along your route is important, but so is charging speed.
If your EV has an 800 volt charging architecture, coupled with a fast charging curve, stopping to charge is less of a nuisance. You would be okay with less range. Stop, Charge, and Go.
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