ABBB
Well-known member
You could be right. Maybe that's an optional rather than standard battery. But I've seen zero information on a different battery option.
Here's the press release. https://media.chevrolet.com/media/u...s/us/en/2022/jan/ces/0105-2024-silverado.html It says: "Expected GM-estimated 400-mile range on a full charge offered on Work Truck (WT) and RST." Perhaps "offered" signals an option, and multiple battery options.
TFL: "The Silverado WT is rated at 400 miles of total range and will be available (starting with fleet customers) in the Spring of 2023."
The Detroit News: "The fleet-focused Work Truck will arrive ahead of the RST and will be more spare while still boasting 400-mile range."
Motortrend: "The Silverado EV WT shares the same Ultium platform with a 24-module battery pack with the rest of the Silverado EV lineup and will offer the same 400 miles of estimated range. The Silverado EV WT will come standard with DC fast-charge capability of up to 35 kW, which should be good enough to add 100 miles of range in just 10 minutes."
The Drive: "Like the 2022 GMC Hummer EV with which it shares GM's Ultium EV platform, the Silverado EV WT will only be produced as a crew cab. Underneath, it'll stow a ginormous battery pack my colleague Peter Holderith has taken to calling "a huge acid-filled mattress." GM hasn't stated its capacity but boasts the biggest-battery Silverado EVs will best 400 miles of range and recharge 100 miles in 10 minutes on 350-kilowatt DC fast-charging."
Leave it to GM to be the first to go deceptive in their marketing looking for a competitive advantage. Ford was conservative when they released initial PR for their EV truck, announcing figures likely to be seen from expected use. Sure, their battery is capable of 450 miles or whatever it is, but that’s without passengers or anything at all loaded in the truck. So they said 300 or 350 so as not to mislead and generate expectations that won’t be met. I think this is wise in the first generations of mass produced EVs, there’s a lot of skeptical public to win over and baiting and switching isn’t going to help the cause. Seems in keeping to me with some of GM’s cheap tactics in production and their reliance on legacy to keep moving vehicles. I suppose they deserve a chance, it’s true we haven’t seen the truck at work yet, but it is a somewhat outlandish claim when compared to Ford, Hummer, Rivian.
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