UNITED KINGDOM – The UK’s Smith Electric Vehicles is about to launch
mid- and large-size electric delivery trucks into the U.S. market. It will be closely
followed by a new company, Modec Ltd. Private fleets and utilities have
committed to major orders from each.
But in pilot tests, Modec’s William Doelle said the truck
makers have learned some hard lessons. Among the lessons learned are:
Make sure trained and educated technicians work
with high-voltage chargers.
Create clear, explicit, and well-illustrated
owners and maintenance manuals that cover every possible contingency.
Evaluate a new central site for your fleet based
on whether the local utility can actually deliver a new high-voltage supply
lines in weeks — versus months or years.
Also, both Smith and Modec plan to manufacture up to 10,000
trucks a year in the United States.
Their trucks differ, however, in that Smith adapts existing Ford commercial
vehicles — their Ampere is the long-wheelbase version of Ford’s upcoming
Transit Connect small van, and their Faraday II is based on Ford’s massive
F-650 — whereas Modec has designed its range of electric trucks from the ground
up.