DreamBrother1
Active member
A brand new F150 Supercrew starts at $40,780 right nowDoesn’t seem crazy. It 100% Is crazy. ICE crew cab trucks are not even $40k, a comparably priced ICE F150 to a lightning are very close in price.
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A brand new F150 Supercrew starts at $40,780 right nowDoesn’t seem crazy. It 100% Is crazy. ICE crew cab trucks are not even $40k, a comparably priced ICE F150 to a lightning are very close in price.
Sounds like you know what you need to go buy… enjoy. I’m not gonna be the one that tells ford they need to eat more money on every vehicle they sell, I’m sure it’s got to be stomach churning for the stockholders and executives already how much money they’re pissing into this initiative.A brand new F150 Supercrew starts at $40,780 right now
$40k is what Ford said when they unveiled the Lightning. I think that's what most of the hundreds of thousands of reservations were for, and a reasonable price goal down the road (in 2023 dollars) for the absolute lowest base/entry point. Many of those initial reservations never converted to orders because the $40k Lightning didn't really exist. I don't think Ford is pissing away money into EVs. It's short sighted to think ICE F150s can keep Ford alive and king of the mountain forever. Assume most (if not all) non-commercial vehicles are eventually battery powered. Not next year, not in 5-10 years, but eventually. There are growing pains for sure right now for Ford as they scale and bring down the cost per unit. But if I was a shareholder my timeline would be decades, and I wouldn't want to be part of the last manufacturer to transition if everything else on the road is an EV.Sounds like you know what you need to go buy… enjoy. I’m not gonna be the one that tells ford they need to eat more money on every vehicle they sell, I’m sure it’s got to be stomach churning for the stockholders and executives already how much money they’re pissing into this initiative.
It is price, mostly.Kind of related here but Ford, GM, and others have been hinting at decreased EV demand for a while. I'm sure there are many contributing factors but the main driver of orders appears straight forward to me -- cost! Media outlets constantly try to push the narrative that EVs are essentially a fad. That EVs wont sell because they are inferior vehicles that will all catch on fire. To anyone paying attention this is just incorrect. People really like EVs, but they still aren't very accessible, especially in larger form factors. I'm incredibly excited about my F150 lightning, but the entry point is still so high for them to expect massive sales numbers. The cheapest real and available EV truck in the US starts at $50k. Plus tax, plus registration, plus variable home charger installation costs, plus any add ons like 9.6kwh pro power, tow tech/max tow, bed liner, tonneau cover, running boards, etc. Which many (not all) truck owners may want. On top of this are terrible interest rates. Sales will increase with lower cost of entry for the customer. I'm not an automotive executive but to me the goal is under $40k. Saying that seems crazy because that's a pretty low number in 2023. This takes a lot of investment from the manufacturer to reduce the cost per vehicle at larger scale, and other factors to fall in line like cost and availability of materials. 'Production hell' as the billionaire cybertruck boy called it. Just bugging me because I've been seeing more articles recently after ford announced cutting their 3rd shift at Rogue that just don't get it.
$40k?? I think that most May ‘21 reservationists were expecting an EV truck that started at $32,500 (including EV tax credit at the time). It was a no-brainer, cheaper than ICE XL, and the expectation was to buy a nicely equipped version, or an ER, for maybe $10k over that: $42,500 more or less, after federal tax credit. What did we get? Zilch availability of Pro, scant availability of $70k XLT, $80k+ Lariats and $98k Platinums. Then 2023 came along, auto finance rates nearly doubled, and the previously-feasible $50k auto loan became an impossible dream. The party was over. Demand is still there, strong as it ever was, but without the enabling low interest rates to grease the deals, buyers stay home.$40k is what Ford said when they unveiled the Lightning. I think that's what most of the hundreds of thousands of reservations were for, and a reasonable price goal down the road (in 2023 dollars) for the absolute lowest base/entry point. Many of those initial reservations never converted to orders because the $40k Lightning didn't really exist. I don't think Ford is pissing away money into EVs. It's short sighted to think ICE F150s can keep Ford alive and king of the mountain forever. Assume most (if not all) non-commercial vehicles are eventually battery powered. Not next year, not in 5-10 years, but eventually. There are growing pains for sure right now for Ford as they scale and bring down the cost per unit. But if I was a shareholder my timeline would be decades, and I wouldn't want to be part of the last manufacturer to transition if everything else on the road is an EV.
Well - I guess it depends on your point of comparison. If you look at WT4 (and WT3 I guess) numbers, they will likely be a "flood" as compared to Hummer EV numbers! ~20/month is 1000% more than ~2/month!Wait so they’re not going to flood the market with WT4 work trucks?
$40k?? I think that most May ‘21 reservationists were expecting an EV truck that started at $32,500 (including EV tax credit at the time). It was a no-brainer, cheaper than ICE XL, and the expectation was to buy a nicely equipped version, or an ER, for maybe $10k over that: $42,500 more or less, after federal tax credit. What did we get? Zilch availability of Pro, scant availability of $70k XLT, $80k+ Lariats and $98k Platinums. Then 2023 came along, auto finance rates nearly doubled, and the previously-feasible $50k auto loan became an impossible dream. The party was over. Demand is still there, strong as it ever was, but without the enabling low interest rates to grease the deals, buyers stay home.
I got a pro for $40k too, there are dozens of us!I was one of them. Eventually talked myself into going the XLT route after seeing the PRO was otherwise completely unavailable.
...only to then be sent the request to convert to an order after the first $7k price increase.
Only a rube would think that.40k?? I think that most May ‘21 reservationists were expecting an EV truck that started at $32,500 (including EV tax credit at the time). It was a no-brainer, cheaper than ICE XL,
Where? A F-150 SuperCrew XL at Kendall Ford is $50,200, and that is not even comparable to a Pro Trim.A brand new F150 Supercrew starts at $40,780 right now