• Welcome to F150Lightningforum.com everyone!

    If you're joining us from F150gen14.com, then you may already have an account here!

    If you were registered on F150gen14.com as of April 16, 2022 or earlier, then you can simply login here with the same username and password!

Sponsored

New here with some stupid questions

carys98

Well-known member
First Name
Cary
Joined
Jan 15, 2022
Threads
22
Messages
574
Reaction score
828
Location
Raleigh, NC
Vehicles
2023 Lightning Lariat SR
Thanks for your input.
Maybe an ev isn't for me.
Which is why I joined this forum, to get an education in ev workings, instead of just buying one.
If I don't go ev, it would likely be a Ram diesel.

Honestly I am a bit surprised that some feel at home charging is the only answer though, with 240 a must. I don't add gas to my ram every trip to town, its only 60 kms round trip to town. That should be a small fraction of the batteries charge used, is all. We typically shop on a Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday, and then go to church Sunday, is our only trips to town.
It is a change in thinking. Some days I drive 0.8 miles round trip to the grocery store and when I get home I immediately plug in and top my battery back up to 80%. It takes me about 15 seconds to grab the cable and plug in. The upside is I never have to spend time going to a gas station. I also don’t think of “filling up” anymore. Today I took a trip and I needed about 110% of my battery capacity to make the trip. I started the day at 100% and on the way home I stopped and added 20% at a DC charger. In an ICE vehicle I would have filled that tank all the way up but I knew I could recharge when I got home while I’m sleeping.

As I said I think all of the lifestyle changes are positive and if you approach it with an open mind you will love having an EV. If you try to treat it the same as an ICE vehicle you will be frustrated. But for me the ability to charge at home is the number one advantage. Even if you only get a 24A charger (same as a dryer or water heater circuit) that will be enough.
Sponsored

 

RickLightning

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2022
Threads
76
Messages
4,753
Reaction score
6,205
Location
SE MI
Vehicles
'22 Lightning ER Lariat,'22 Mach-E Premium 4X
As others have said, if you aren’t going to use 240v at home during those really cold days, don't buy an EV. Any EV.

As to visiting your daughter, same thing. If it is -40, you want the truck plugged into 240v. If you are at her house often during extreme temps like that, and not going to install 240v at her house, don't buy an EV.
 

LightningB514

Active member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Aug 17, 2023
Threads
8
Messages
37
Reaction score
36
Location
Glenwood Springs, CO
Vehicles
2023 F-150 Lightning Lariat
Occupation
Accountant
Not sure if it’s been mentioned but your range will be almost cut in half in cold weather. I live in the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. I’ve been in below zero weather and the truck does ok but have had issues with public charging. I also garage my Lightning and have a 240 split from my dryer. You will definitely need Level 2 charging or it will be a complete nightmare. Honestly, if I were in your position, I wouldn’t suggest an EV. So much can go wrong especially if you are in very cold weather.
 

climateguy

Well-known member
First Name
David
Joined
Apr 15, 2024
Threads
12
Messages
134
Reaction score
121
Location
Ferndale, Washington
Vehicles
2021 Bolt, 2024 Flash, MaxTow
Occupation
Retired
When I shopped for my 2024 Flash, I found it impossible to avoid getting the Ford mobile charger included in the deal. It is an L2 charger that can charge from a 120 volt or 240 volt outlet. What I wanted to do was save the $500 Ford requires a customer to pay for this, and buy a better mobile charger I could use with this truck.

Perhaps things have changed and Ford and its dealers sell these trucks without forcing the Ford mobile chargers onto their customers.

I don't understand why someone who is willing to pay for one of these trucks (the MSRP on my Flash was $67,995) who is unwilling to pay the cost to put in a 240 volt outlet in the garage that they own. I put my outlet in for the cost of the circuit breaker, a few feet of wire, and the outlet. Obviously, the cost of putting in an outlet can be more expensive, if you have to hire an electrician, or increase your service size to accommodate the extra load. Whatever.

In the end, the factors that seemed worth considering before I bought my electric car and electric truck faded away and I took the plunge. I take the attitude that as far as I'm concerned, ICE vehicles do not exist for me as an option.

When anyone starts in questioning why I would accept whatever inconvenience they think using electric vehicles means for me, I just say "I want to stop using fossil fuels". In rare cases, I've said variations of what kind of civilization is this, we're going to tell our descendants, as we hand the huge problem of climate change to them, we just couldn't stop filling the atmosphere with garbage that will end this age of life and possibly end civilization because fossil fuels were too convenient?
 

cal

Well-known member
First Name
Cal
Joined
Jun 26, 2023
Threads
5
Messages
245
Reaction score
146
Location
Battle Ground WA
Vehicles
2022 Lightning, Tesla Model S Plaid
Occupation
retired
I think all the advice is excellent and you might be missing their point. You’ll figure it after the 1st year. I got my maxed out 22 lariat in 23 after the previous owner gave up on his unrealistic view of Ev’s. He had a lot of $ and just wanted to get rid of it. My point is that he just didn’t understand how the vehicle works and had unrealistic expectations. E.g. 75mph on the highway and not getting 320 miles range. And the estimated daily range started to drop as the truck recognized he was a heavy lead foot. Just a few of the newby complaints that we hear all the time.
 

Sponsored

potato

Well-known member
First Name
John
Joined
Feb 1, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
142
Reaction score
211
Location
BC, Canada
Vehicles
2023 F150 Lightning XLT ER
Our daughter who lives in Mcbride, the 260 km regular trip we make, just 10 kms away in town, are charging stations. We can easily go there and charge it during our trip, and top off there before we head home to. While its rare for the temps to be -40 while we are there, it has been in the past.
I live in PG. The good thing about McBride is whichever way you are coming from, there's a "plan B" available - there is emergency "fast" charging (25 kW) at Slim Creek, and a proper 100 kW in Valemount.

260 km would be touch and go in -40. Maybe if you drove really slowly. *but* I would not let the battery get that low in those conditions. If anything goes wrong it goes sideways pretty quickly. I would plan on extra charging stops to give you that margin of error, and just drive normally to preserve sanity.

Last winter it approached -40 for a couple of days but there were only 5 or 6 days where it dropped below -30 here in PG (since I got the truck in January anyway). In those conditions driving at normal highway speeds I was getting about 45 kWh / 100 km efficiency. So 50% worse than in summer. I did a round trip to Williams Lake in -25 to -30 to test exactly that.

I agree that without level 2 charging, you're more likely to run into trouble. But at home with heated garage you're OK, and you're probably OK in McBride, with both BC Hydro and Tesla chargers there now... I think...
 
OP
OP
Joined
Sep 1, 2024
Threads
1
Messages
11
Reaction score
2
Location
BC Canada
Vehicles
Ram 1500 Honda Accord Jeep Rubicon
Occupation
Semi retired truck driver
Thanks everyone.
My concern about the slim creek charger is it being the only 1, it not working if i need it.
Down in the bowl it seems to be several degrees warmer than where i live west of PG off hwy 16 towards Vanderhoof. My daughter lives on the other side of McBride, about 10 kms towards jasper.
If I want to add a 240 plug to the house garage, we would have to lose something else, and I'm not willing to do that. I don't care if ford wants to pay me to put the charger in, I'm still not giving up on anything else that we have, for example my hot tub.
Anyone who tried to steal my hot tub will be shot.
The cold, and inconvenient shop has 240, but is less than ideal for parking the pickup in.

I may just wait until technology is betrer in the ev world, and keep driving my ram, option 1.
Buy a lightning and plug it into 120 volts at home, and if if needs a top off in town occasionally, not a big deal, that's option 2.
Or wait a year and buy a ram with the big battery pack, but also has a gas engine that will start if needed on really long trips, option 3.
Shop for a lightly used and low km ram ecodiesel since they stopped building new ones, option 4.

There are 168 hours in a week, so if its plugged into 120 volts, for 155 to 160 hours on a typical week, that should add a very significant amount of charge, often just leaving it on a float mode at 80% where it would be set to not charge past, unless planning a big trip in the near future.
I'm also not a lead foot, tearing off every time a light turns green, or my driving speed on the hwy.
Generally on the hwy I do maybe 101 or 102 kms/hr in a 100 zone, so nobody behind me can complain that I'm driving to slow.
Haven't received a speeding ticket in more than my last 5 million kms driven.
I've read every comment in this thread, and appreciate your input, even if you say don't buy an ev. Potato, glad to know that someone on here lives not too far away from me.
Did you buy it at pgmotors, or go to Quesnel or Vanderhoof like many do. We went to town today, had lunch at Grammas inn on central, and got talking to a lightning owner there, while eating. He loves his lightning, lives on north nechako road, and only plugs his into 120 at home as well. Like me, his is garage kept, not sitting outside in the sun, or -40 when at home. My garage is typically 5 C to 25 C, maybe on occasion it reaches 30 C.
 

potato

Well-known member
First Name
John
Joined
Feb 1, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
142
Reaction score
211
Location
BC, Canada
Vehicles
2023 F150 Lightning XLT ER
Bought from PG Ford but probably should have shopped around more. I park outside for now... haven't gotten around to clearing out the garage enough, and it would be a tight fit anyway. Realistically it'll probably stay outside lol.

I would add that in the much more typical -10 to -20 temperatures around here, 260 km would be no problem for an ER. I did the 300 km from my house north of PG to the Mt Terry Fox rest area by Mt Robson using 80%. -12 or so when I left, -7 on arrival. -40 is really an outlier temperature and for me, honestly, it'd be a shelter in place situation, no matter what I am driving, gas diesel or electric. Things go from bad to worse really really fast if anything goes wrong in those conditions.

The Ramcharger will be a great option especially for people who tow. You give up the frunk, but range anxiety is completely gone. Hopefully it's priced sanely.

The Silverado with the gigantic battery might be another option. 700 km range (in ideal conditions) is a little crazy lol. A friend here bought one and is happy with it. I'd think it would be good for 400 km even in really bad winter weather.

The one thing about all this range discussion... the single biggest factor is wind, more than temperature. And that's really hard to plan for.
 

Kev12345

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 4, 2021
Threads
20
Messages
510
Reaction score
502
Location
Canada
Vehicles
Ram 1500
Why wouldn't you set up a 240v charger at home? Forget about plugging it in to a 120v outlet. If you don’t have a place to charge at home don’t bother with an EV.
Sponsored

 
 





Top