antimatter
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Lloyd
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2024
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 112
- Reaction score
- 156
- Location
- Minneapolis, MN
- Vehicles
- Honda Ridgeline, Honda CR-Z
- Occupation
- Chief Compliance Officer
You sound a lot like me before I bought my R1T. I test drove everything in EV pickup - R1T, Silverado RST, and Ford Lightning. I was really attracted to the Silverado's battery size, mostly because I worried about running out of charge in some deserted area and having to wait hours for a tow to get me to where I wanted to be. After a lot of soul-searching I went with the Rivian, mostly because (at the time) Chevrolet wouldn't bargain at all on the price, and I actually got scoffed at when I suggested that I'd like to pick an RST up for under $80K. I can do that now, buying used, but I've decided to stick with my Rivian.
My needs broke down as:
1. Commuter Vehicle - I used my Honda Ridgeline as my primary commuting vehicle to drive the 40-ish miles to and back from my work place. Where I work has free parking, but its in an older ramp that has some pretty tight confines.. Even with the rear-wheel steering, an RST would be a handful there.
2. Grocery-getter- My wife hates grocery shopping, so I do most of it and I run other errands (I like to drive). I wanted something that do that and not be a PITA in parking lots.
3. Dirt/Garden waste hauler & DIY project shipping - Where a full-sized pickup would be nice, but I can get by with a medium truck.
4. 4x per year RV towing - We go on a couple of camping trips per year, plus I do some camping for a club I'm in. The RST would be nice for that, but I made the Rivian work.
I don't know if you saw my post about going from Minneapolis to Billings, MT to pick up a camper and hauling it back in one weekend, during a period when the temps ranged from 20 F to -4F, but I made it. My R1T can haul the RV a solid 100 miles between charges at 60 mph, and even made a hilly 135 mile pull on the first leg of the return trip by slowing down to 55 mph.
I say this with no rancor, but you might want to wait a few years before you commit to an EV truck. Battery tech is advancing rapidly and there are several Chinese companies that are putting some amazing charging and energy density tech out there. I personally think they'll make the whole EREV thing moot in 5 years, but as they say, "Man Plans, God Laughs". If you've got to have the towing/temp performance you mentioned, pick up a used diesel truck and keep an eye on EV tech as it comes out. You should be able to sell the diesel with minimal loss, and transition to an EV when tech meets your expectations. Best of luck with whatever you decided.
My needs broke down as:
1. Commuter Vehicle - I used my Honda Ridgeline as my primary commuting vehicle to drive the 40-ish miles to and back from my work place. Where I work has free parking, but its in an older ramp that has some pretty tight confines.. Even with the rear-wheel steering, an RST would be a handful there.
2. Grocery-getter- My wife hates grocery shopping, so I do most of it and I run other errands (I like to drive). I wanted something that do that and not be a PITA in parking lots.
3. Dirt/Garden waste hauler & DIY project shipping - Where a full-sized pickup would be nice, but I can get by with a medium truck.
4. 4x per year RV towing - We go on a couple of camping trips per year, plus I do some camping for a club I'm in. The RST would be nice for that, but I made the Rivian work.
I don't know if you saw my post about going from Minneapolis to Billings, MT to pick up a camper and hauling it back in one weekend, during a period when the temps ranged from 20 F to -4F, but I made it. My R1T can haul the RV a solid 100 miles between charges at 60 mph, and even made a hilly 135 mile pull on the first leg of the return trip by slowing down to 55 mph.
I say this with no rancor, but you might want to wait a few years before you commit to an EV truck. Battery tech is advancing rapidly and there are several Chinese companies that are putting some amazing charging and energy density tech out there. I personally think they'll make the whole EREV thing moot in 5 years, but as they say, "Man Plans, God Laughs". If you've got to have the towing/temp performance you mentioned, pick up a used diesel truck and keep an eye on EV tech as it comes out. You should be able to sell the diesel with minimal loss, and transition to an EV when tech meets your expectations. Best of luck with whatever you decided.
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