Examining the Ford F150 Hybrid Possibilities
#1
Examining the Ford F150 Hybrid Possibilities
TorqueNews has posted a good analysis examining the Ford F150 Hybrid possibilities.
What would you expect from a Hybrid F150?
Guessing the Ford F150 Hybrid Drivetrain
So far, the only information on the hybrid F150 promised to arrive by 2020 is that it will offer “powerful towing and payload capacity”. That is pretty vague, but we also know that the Ford Mustang is slated to get a hybrid drivetrain by 2020 and it is more than possible than these two vehicles will share a hybrid drivetrain. After all, the F150 and Mustang have shared many engines over the years and according to Ford, the hybrid Mustang will pack “V8 power and even more low-end torque”, so it seems reasonable to believe that the Mustang hybrid with V8 power and torque could serve as a great hybrid drivetrain for the F150 as well.
So far, the only information on the hybrid F150 promised to arrive by 2020 is that it will offer “powerful towing and payload capacity”. That is pretty vague, but we also know that the Ford Mustang is slated to get a hybrid drivetrain by 2020 and it is more than possible than these two vehicles will share a hybrid drivetrain. After all, the F150 and Mustang have shared many engines over the years and according to Ford, the hybrid Mustang will pack “V8 power and even more low-end torque”, so it seems reasonable to believe that the Mustang hybrid with V8 power and torque could serve as a great hybrid drivetrain for the F150 as well.
#4
I expect the hybrid F150 to be a very limited production truck. GM tried it a few years back and they couldn't give them away. Doesn't matter how much they claim it will tow, folks are not just going to dump a known mechanical vehicle and jump off into something new. I doubt it makes even a ripple in the waters of sales. And even if it does out tow on nice level ground and use less fuel, who is to say the electric motors won't go into safe mode when pulling that same load in the mountains. It's one thing to pull a max load up ONE grade and then back down. It's a different game when you do it for hours. One of these days, we all will be driving diesel/electrics but it's in the distant future, not the near future.
#5
#6
It's a joke that was made to please the former Administration that was full of Eco nuts. The motors, batteries and internal combustion powerplant add a lot of weight that run up the empty vehicle weight. This in turn drags down the available payload. Now you have a truck that might have a lot of grunt for a short spurt but the truck is pushing the weight limits when you try to use it.
Having said that, a friend of mine had a hybrid VW Touareg. We flat embarrassed an empty GM truck on the freeway while towing a trailer. He had a loud exhaust and it was obvious that he was trying to beat us to the merge point and was going to cut us off. My friend made sure that didn't happen. I'm not sure what hurt the redneck's feelings more, the fact a VW pulling a trailer walked away from him or that it was a hybrid.
Having said that, a friend of mine had a hybrid VW Touareg. We flat embarrassed an empty GM truck on the freeway while towing a trailer. He had a loud exhaust and it was obvious that he was trying to beat us to the merge point and was going to cut us off. My friend made sure that didn't happen. I'm not sure what hurt the redneck's feelings more, the fact a VW pulling a trailer walked away from him or that it was a hybrid.
#7
Having said that, a friend of mine had a hybrid VW Touareg. We flat embarrassed an empty GM truck on the freeway while towing a trailer. He had a loud exhaust and it was obvious that he was trying to beat us to the merge point and was going to cut us off. My friend made sure that didn't happen. I'm not sure what hurt the redneck's feelings more, the fact a VW pulling a trailer walked away from him or that it was a hybrid.