No video. It was snowy and the road slick. I have no interest in an aluminum pickup anyway.Please post a video of you getting a 2021 F150 sideways with the traction control and Advancetrac on.
No video. It was snowy and the road slick. I have no interest in an aluminum pickup anyway.Please post a video of you getting a 2021 F150 sideways with the traction control and Advancetrac on.
No video. It was snowy and the road slick. I have no interest in an aluminum pickup anyway.
I tried to get it to slide with all systems on and it was easy to do. My guess is wrong tires -- low profile - but it can be done. In fact, all vehicles can be made to slide if you know what you're doing.I knew that there was more to the story! Also... Mine does just fine in the snow.
I tried to get it to slide with all systems on and it was easy to do. My guess is wrong tires -- low profile - but it can be done. In fact, all vehicles can be made to slide if you know what you're doing.
I'm sure yours does fine if you take it easy. I wanted to see if it would slide in normal winter conditions -- snow and ice -- and it does. No weight in the back end will do that.
Not sure what "more to the story means" -- I don't want an aluminum truck but that has nothing to do with making it slide, except perhaps the lighter weight. Insurance companies love the new aluminum trucks -- they charge higher premiums because the cost to repair is significantly higher. I'm guessing by your title that you're a bit of a fan boy.
I tried to get it to slide with all systems on and it was easy to do. My guess is wrong tires -- low profile - but it can be done. In fact, all vehicles can be made to slide if you know what you're doing.
I'm sure yours does fine if you take it easy. I wanted to see if it would slide in normal winter conditions -- snow and ice -- and it does. No weight in the back end will do that.
Not sure what "more to the story means" -- I don't want an aluminum truck but that has nothing to do with making it slide, except perhaps the lighter weight. Insurance companies love the new aluminum trucks -- they charge higher premiums because the cost to repair is significantly higher. I'm guessing by your title that you're a bit of a fan boy.
I have decades of experience working with insurance companies and law enforcement agencies on vehicle issues. I’m sure the Lightning will be great but facts are facts - I like to rely on facts and experience, not on industry press which is typically marketing. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, but not your own set of facts.
My 2019 F150 costs less to insure than my 2014 GMC Sierra. Traction in snow/ice/wet is about tread pattern, compound, and appropriate tire pressure, not the aspect ratio of the tire. Vehicles are shipped with inappropriate tires for snow & ice (with very few exceptions), everyone knows that. Any vehicle can be made to slide on snow/ice/wet, regardless of active driver assist technologies, if one tries hard enough. Ford did a good job with their traction & stability controls on the new F150s; in snow/wet mode I can accelerate pretty hard uphill from a stoplight with very little wheel slippage. It works about as well on wet roads in town as GMs auto 4WD.
I have not found that to be the case. I would suggest getting a couple insurance quotes on a couple trucks to compare.Insurance companies love the new aluminum trucks -- they charge higher premiums because the cost to repair is significantly higher.
Nice! What about logistics? long trip into the rural landscape of the america's and beyond? I dont think so. Driving across state and back after a recharge probably. Performance needs real world trials. right now its not feasable for the average person. it an expensive novelty.
Nice! What about logistics? long trip into the rural landscape of the america's and beyond? I dont think so. Driving across state and back after a recharge probably. Performance needs real world trials. right now its not feasable for the average person. it an expensive novelty.
Right now it's perfectly feasible for the average person. The average person very rarely drives more than a couple hours from home and flies to their destination when taking a long trip. Additional planning is necessary when using EVs for long distance travel, but with ~300 miles of range, the average person need not suffer from range anxiety.
I have not found that to be the case. I would suggest getting a couple insurance quotes on a couple trucks to compare.
However I guess if you are not interested in aluminum, it's a moot point.
I believe a lot of companies will be using more and more aluminum in the construction of the truck bodies....
2019 Chevy Silverado cuts up to 450 lbs. with aluminum closures, higher-strength steel
General Motors announced Saturday that a “mixed materials strategy” removed up to 450 pounds of weight from the next-generation Chevrolet Silverado. “With the all-new Silverado, we̵…www.repairerdrivennews.com
The new Ram 1500's use an aluminum tailgate. So I suspect more use of aluminum is on the way there.
Toyota has not mentioned to the best of my knowledge what the 2022 Tundra will be made from. I suspect we will find out shortly though.