Pioneer74
Well-known member
Body? Yes.But seriously, there's no way they're going to be able to ramp that fast--can the rouge plant even physically accommodate this many?
Paint? Yes.
Final? No.
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Body? Yes.But seriously, there's no way they're going to be able to ramp that fast--can the rouge plant even physically accommodate this many?
It’s over.anyone have a link to the livestream? is it over? forgot about it... just checked ford's site, and it says "we're currently not streaming"
Looks like it’s over… would like to see a replay though.anyone have a link to the livestream? is it over? forgot about it... just checked ford's site, and it says "we're currently not streaming"
Unfortunately, there are no replays.Looks like it’s over… would like to see a replay though.
Usually will pop up on YouTube. Try tomorrow.Looks like it’s over… would like to see a replay though.
They also said that Pro Power onboard was optional on the pro. No, 9.6kw is optional. And it seems unlikely that they will deliver 150k trucks for MY22 when wave 1 deliveries don’t begin for 20+ weeks and most dealers don’t seem to be getting more than 1.Yeah, this is just a Ford communications person (likely a college intern or similar manning the chat) that misread the Jan 4th announcement.
Reading into the Long McArthur video a bit more, Ford is ramping up quickly and throwing money at staffing, building, and etc. Building 150K per year is doable, but not entirely at that small building. I read the max that building can produce is 14 per hour.I will be curious how many are in Wave 2 this week. Using the backdoor, it appears that I will be in Wave 2. But I seriously doubt that considering I'm #45 at my dealer even though I reserved about 10 hours after the reveal. If there really are 150,000 Lightnings to produce, then a lot more will be allotted to dealers.
Maybe I'm misinterpreting what they said to my question, but I couldn't have asked my follow up more directly. To someone's point earlier, this could have been a marketing person who doesn't know what they are saying.
14 trucks/hour, running 24/7 for 52 weeks straight is only 122,640 trucks. We know they don't run 24/7 straight all year, so that'll lower the number below 100K trucks/year. Plus at beginning of production, there'll be a lot of starts/stops.. usually couple weeks down here or there for maintenance.. plus remember production wont start til spring, so say we lose 2 months of production for Jan and Feb, that'd be about 20K trucks less minimum. So realistic production number would be around 60-80K trucks made to the end of the year, if in fact its 14 trucks per hour and they go balls out on production.Reading into the Long McArthur video a bit more, Ford is ramping up quickly and throwing money at staffing, building, and etc. Building 150K per year is doable, but not entirely at that small building. I read the max that building can produce is 14 per hour.
So I did math on this sometime ago and you also need to factor in union holidays off, the fact they work 6 days a week vs 7.14 trucks/hour, running 24/7 for 52 weeks straight is only 122,640 trucks. We know they don't run 24/7 straight all year, so that'll lower the number below 100K trucks/year. Plus at beginning of production, there'll be a lot of starts/stops.. usually couple weeks down here or there for maintenance.. plus remember production wont start til spring, so say we lose 2 months of production for Jan and Feb, that'd be about 20K trucks less minimum. So realistic production number would be around 60-80K trucks made to the end of the year, if in fact its 14 trucks per hour and they go balls out on production.
I was born and grew up in the metro Detroit area.. my whole family worked on the lines for the Big 3...employees can take union holidays off, but that's when they'd pay time and a half and double time on the lines. My uncles would pick up shifts on these days cuz it was free money. So holidays doesn't mean production stops. I worked in the steel industry for about 8 years.. let me tell you this.. plants and factories love to run on weekends and holidays because they get the cheapest electricity rates.So I did math on this sometime ago and you also need to factor in union holidays off, the fact they work 6 days a week vs 7.
14 jobs per hourSo I did math on this sometime ago and you also need to factor in union holidays off, the fact they work 6 days a week vs 7.