Author Topic: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video  (Read 8870 times)

Offline rrocket

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #40 on: November 29, 2022, 05:50:45 pm »
Most people don't tow with their trucks.


Depends on where you live.  Your sample of 1 may be biased.

I don't think it should be just "towing" but more specific towing.  That is longer than say 150kms before having access to a charger.  A friend of ours has owned a pickup truck for over 20 years, has a boat and recently got a nice utility trailer.  He tows, but he doesn't tow more than 50kms at one time. 

I would say there are definitely quite a few people out there that tow, but there would be some of them that wouldn't tow more than 150kms before having access to a charger.  Obviously this truck is not the best for long distance towing of any kind.  But shorter distance, it can handle.

Again, this is 100% a compromise and does not live up to the ICE competition.  But then it does offer quite a few advantages over the ICE as well.  So in the end, it's not for everyone.

But again, if I have to immediately put the freaking thing on a charger for an hour after towing something across town, thats kinda meaningless.
Across town?  How big of a town you got.  We are talking about 150kms.  If it's say 30kms across town in stop and go traffic towing a bunch of soil, you wouldn't be left with no range.  Like I said, it's a compromise, not perfect and anyone who says it is doesn't really grasp what a real truck can do.  That being said, only a portion of truck buyers tow something large for more than 150kms at one time, and with this being an EV you'll see a greater number of people who wouldn't consider a truck before now consider it.

Long story shot, EV trucks are by no means going to make the ICE trucks obsolete, not by a long shot.  But it's nice to have it as an option.

If you add in -10C or worse, that range is going to be much less, however.

Funny you mention that.

Ford released this a couple days ago.  Winter tips.

Park in a garage
Use the HVAC controls minimally.

https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/news/2022/11/23/tips-to-help-maximize-the-range-of-your-f-150-lightning-in-cold-.html
How fast is my 911?  Supras sh*t on on me all the time...in reverse..with blown turbos  :( ...

Offline Layne

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #41 on: November 29, 2022, 06:11:49 pm »
Most people don't tow with their trucks.


Depends on where you live.  Your sample of 1 may be biased.

I don't think it should be just "towing" but more specific towing.  That is longer than say 150kms before having access to a charger.  A friend of ours has owned a pickup truck for over 20 years, has a boat and recently got a nice utility trailer.  He tows, but he doesn't tow more than 50kms at one time. 

I would say there are definitely quite a few people out there that tow, but there would be some of them that wouldn't tow more than 150kms before having access to a charger.  Obviously this truck is not the best for long distance towing of any kind.  But shorter distance, it can handle.

Again, this is 100% a compromise and does not live up to the ICE competition.  But then it does offer quite a few advantages over the ICE as well.  So in the end, it's not for everyone.

But again, if I have to immediately put the freaking thing on a charger for an hour after towing something across town, thats kinda meaningless.
Across town?  How big of a town you got.  We are talking about 150kms.  If it's say 30kms across town in stop and go traffic towing a bunch of soil, you wouldn't be left with no range.  Like I said, it's a compromise, not perfect and anyone who says it is doesn't really grasp what a real truck can do.  That being said, only a portion of truck buyers tow something large for more than 150kms at one time, and with this being an EV you'll see a greater number of people who wouldn't consider a truck before now consider it.

Long story shot, EV trucks are by no means going to make the ICE trucks obsolete, not by a long shot.  But it's nice to have it as an option.


If you add in -10C or worse, that range is going to be much less, however.

Funny you mention that.

Ford released this a couple days ago.  Winter tips.

Park in a garage
Use the HVAC controls minimally.

https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/news/2022/11/23/tips-to-help-maximize-the-range-of-your-f-150-lightning-in-cold-.html

Holy caveats, Batman.

Offline revalations

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #42 on: November 29, 2022, 07:53:37 pm »
Most people don't tow with their trucks.


Depends on where you live.  Your sample of 1 may be biased.

I don't think it should be just "towing" but more specific towing.  That is longer than say 150kms before having access to a charger.  A friend of ours has owned a pickup truck for over 20 years, has a boat and recently got a nice utility trailer.  He tows, but he doesn't tow more than 50kms at one time. 

I would say there are definitely quite a few people out there that tow, but there would be some of them that wouldn't tow more than 150kms before having access to a charger.  Obviously this truck is not the best for long distance towing of any kind.  But shorter distance, it can handle.

Again, this is 100% a compromise and does not live up to the ICE competition.  But then it does offer quite a few advantages over the ICE as well.  So in the end, it's not for everyone.

But again, if I have to immediately put the freaking thing on a charger for an hour after towing something across town, thats kinda meaningless.
Across town?  How big of a town you got.  We are talking about 150kms.  If it's say 30kms across town in stop and go traffic towing a bunch of soil, you wouldn't be left with no range.  Like I said, it's a compromise, not perfect and anyone who says it is doesn't really grasp what a real truck can do.  That being said, only a portion of truck buyers tow something large for more than 150kms at one time, and with this being an EV you'll see a greater number of people who wouldn't consider a truck before now consider it.

Long story shot, EV trucks are by no means going to make the ICE trucks obsolete, not by a long shot.  But it's nice to have it as an option.

If you add in -10C or worse, that range is going to be much less, however.

Funny you mention that.

Ford released this a couple days ago.  Winter tips.

Park in a garage
Use the HVAC controls minimally.

https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/news/2022/11/23/tips-to-help-maximize-the-range-of-your-f-150-lightning-in-cold-.html
Fingers in ear “la la la best truck ever, works for 80%, nothing it can’t do, never buy gas, you have to stop anyway, everyone with 90$k to spend has a heated garage anyway”

Never in a modern vehicle have I ever read so many compromises that just get excused with so many “ya buts”. Buy one to go to Home Depot and back and it’ll be the best truck ever.


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Offline bridgecity

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #43 on: November 29, 2022, 08:23:50 pm »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.
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Offline rrocket

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #44 on: November 29, 2022, 08:32:06 pm »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #45 on: November 29, 2022, 10:34:29 pm »
It’s the very limited supply that limits EV sales growth. Ford has a 3 year waiting list for the Lightning. Same situation for most EV’s. When I put a deposit for a Lyric in July I was number 66 on that dealer waiting list. That means I’d be lucky to get it in 2024 if I would decide to actually buy it.

How long to get a Rav4 Prime? And the new Prius, now that it looks good, and with 60 km range, I bet at least 2 years to get one.

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #46 on: November 29, 2022, 11:29:15 pm »
It’s the very limited supply that limits EV sales growth. Ford has a 3 year waiting list for the Lightning. Same situation for most EV’s. When I put a deposit for a Lyric in July I was number 66 on that dealer waiting list. That means I’d be lucky to get it in 2024 if I would decide to actually buy it.

How long to get a Rav4 Prime? And the new Prius, now that it looks good, and with 60 km range, I bet at least 2 years to get one.

2-3 Years for a Rav prime. My Mitsubishi dealer has 90 pre orders for the Outlander PHEV, he's small, the dealer in Vancouver has over 200 orders.

Offline Layne

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #47 on: November 30, 2022, 12:35:14 am »
It’s the very limited supply that limits EV sales growth. Ford has a 3 year waiting list for the Lightning. Same situation for most EV’s. When I put a deposit for a Lyric in July I was number 66 on that dealer waiting list. That means I’d be lucky to get it in 2024 if I would decide to actually buy it.

How long to get a Rav4 Prime? And the new Prius, now that it looks good, and with 60 km range, I bet at least 2 years to get one.

How many orders?  Let’s look at demand as well or your comments are strawman.

Offline PJungnitsch

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #48 on: November 30, 2022, 12:47:47 am »
Yeah we were looking for an electric originally, a Toyota dealer for a Prime was our first call. Our dealer wasn’t even taking orders!

Whoever can supply a reasonably priced AWD electric is going to have a lot of sales

Offline JohnnyMac

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #49 on: November 30, 2022, 08:08:00 am »
It’s the very limited supply that limits EV sales growth. Ford has a 3 year waiting list for the Lightning. Same situation for most EV’s. When I put a deposit for a Lyric in July I was number 66 on that dealer waiting list. That means I’d be lucky to get it in 2024 if I would decide to actually buy it.

How long to get a Rav4 Prime? And the new Prius, now that it looks good, and with 60 km range, I bet at least 2 years to get one.
While I agree that the supply is limiting EV sales, but that's true for a lot of non-EV's currently.  Even if the supply could meet demands, it likely wouldn't be more than a percent or two higher than current market share.

Offline Blueprint

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #50 on: November 30, 2022, 08:20:01 am »
Yeah we were looking for an electric originally, a Toyota dealer for a Prime was our first call. Our dealer wasn’t even taking orders!

Whoever can supply a reasonably priced AWD electric is going to have a lot of sales

A Toyota Canada executive told me that if they had to fill every single order for a RAV4 Prime, it would take them 8 years to fullfill them. The current 3 yr avg delivery time comes from the multiple deposits.

And, just to be clear, if I get the Lightning for a review, I'm not towing anything to Jasper  ;D
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Offline Great_Big_Abyss

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #51 on: November 30, 2022, 08:29:31 am »
Yeah we were looking for an electric originally, a Toyota dealer for a Prime was our first call. Our dealer wasn’t even taking orders!

Whoever can supply a reasonably priced AWD electric is going to have a lot of sales

A Toyota Canada executive told me that if they had to fill every single order for a RAV4 Prime, it would take them 8 years to fullfill them. The current 3 yr avg delivery time comes from the multiple deposits.

And, just to be clear, if I get the Lightning for a review, I'm not towing anything to Jasper  ;D

Just don't mark it as a 10/10 for practicality, because it's NOT as practical as a normal 2.7TT F150.

10/10 for powertrain would be acceptable, though...

Offline OliverD

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #52 on: November 30, 2022, 08:36:36 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #53 on: November 30, 2022, 08:36:45 am »
And, just to be clear, if I get the Lightning for a review, I'm not towing anything to Jasper  ;D

 ;D

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #54 on: November 30, 2022, 09:56:28 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

For sure. I'd guess many are like us where they would have a gasoline vehicle as well, so long trips/extreme cold would be covered. But the 95% of driving that isn't like that could be covered by the electric

The Rav4 Prime is great in that it would be fine by itself, but something like an AWD Bolt would sell by the bucketful

Offline Blueprint

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #55 on: November 30, 2022, 10:13:22 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

For sure. I'd guess many are like us where they would have a gasoline vehicle as well, so long trips/extreme cold would be covered. But the 95% of driving that isn't like that could be covered by the electric

The Rav4 Prime is great in that it would be fine by itself, but something like an AWD Bolt would sell by the bucketful

If GM actually delivers the sub-$40k Equinox EV they promised, they will take over the market.

Offline OliverD

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #56 on: November 30, 2022, 10:13:37 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

For sure. I'd guess many are like us where they would have a gasoline vehicle as well, so long trips/extreme cold would be covered. But the 95% of driving that isn't like that could be covered by the electric

The Rav4 Prime is great in that it would be fine by itself, but something like an AWD Bolt would sell by the bucketful

That's exactly it – most people seem to think that the best solution right now is either a PHEV, or an EV + ICE vehicle as a two car solution.

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #57 on: November 30, 2022, 10:43:55 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

For sure. I'd guess many are like us where they would have a gasoline vehicle as well, so long trips/extreme cold would be covered. But the 95% of driving that isn't like that could be covered by the electric

The Rav4 Prime is great in that it would be fine by itself, but something like an AWD Bolt would sell by the bucketful

Yeah, to me something electric would be a cheap, disposable around town car to get to and from work cheaply. For long road trips, you need a big boy, ICE vehicle of sorts. Sorry, hanging out at charge points with Tesla types espousing their superiority to everyone does not sound like a good time to me.
Lighten up Francis.....

Offline Blueprint

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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #58 on: November 30, 2022, 10:47:26 am »
I am a truck owner. This would not work for me. There are other truck owners on here that it would not work for. I’m sure it would work for many others, such as Taurii, or EV-light or whatever the latest and greatest name is.

Just because a truck owner isn’t towing all the time or hauling all the time doesn’t mean it’s not used for those applications. I drive my truck to work daily not towing or hauling anything. But it works on weekends, mostly in the summer, towing or hauling, more weekends than not.

I do look forward to the day where these electrics are more practical, but they aren’t there yet for a good portion of the population. Have a look at charging infrastructure between Calgary and Saskatoon. Last time I looked there wasn’t a single charger along the way.

I'd say they aren't there yet for MOST of the population.  Price, charging infrastructure, etc.

There's a reason EVs only account for ~5% of the market in NA.

I think supply and price limit the demand more than anything else. Most people I talk to say they intend for their next vehicle to be an EV. A close friend is on the list for a Lightning after four EB F-150s and his wife just got a 330e (i4 was too much $$). Another friend just replaced his wife's old Tucson with a used Corolla as an interim solution until he can get something like the ID.4. Was talking to a few former colleagues who are interested in EVs or PHEVs as their next purchase. It's a pretty consistent theme these days, at least in my experience.

For sure. I'd guess many are like us where they would have a gasoline vehicle as well, so long trips/extreme cold would be covered. But the 95% of driving that isn't like that could be covered by the electric

The Rav4 Prime is great in that it would be fine by itself, but something like an AWD Bolt would sell by the bucketful

Yeah, to me something electric would be a cheap, disposable around town car to get to and from work cheaply. For long road trips, you need a big boy, ICE vehicle of sorts. Sorry, hanging out at charge points with Tesla types espousing their superiority to everyone does not sound like a good time to me.

Just bring this to discuss panel gaps and how other brands have proper assembly procedures. Fun times guaranteed.


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Re: 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Review and Video
« Reply #59 on: November 30, 2022, 10:48:58 am »
OOohhhhhhhh

Actual Tesla owner-