Work Truck Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Lordstown Motors Has Sold Out First-Year Production

Lordstown Motor Corp.’s CEO Steve Burns said preorders from commercial and fleet customers for the all-electric Endurance pickup exceed the company’s production capacity of 20,000 units for 2021.

Chris Brown
Chris BrownAssociate Publisher
Read Chris's Posts
June 25, 2020
Lordstown Motors Has Sold Out First-Year Production

“In the modern automotive world, it's very hard to have a clear lane. We think we do, and it’s the electric full-size truck,” said Steve Burns, Lordstown Motors CEO.

Photo courtesy of Lordstown Motors. 

4 min to read


“Our goal is 20,000 vehicles in the first year of production,” Steve Burns, CEO of Lordstown Motor Corp., told the Bobit fleet team in an interview this week. With existing preorders, “We have the whole first year spoken for.”

Burns is referring to orders for the Endurance all-electric pickup, revealed June 25 at the company’s manufacturing plant in Lordstown, Ohio.

Ad Loading...

Visits from Vice President Mike Pence and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine brought gravitas to the festivities. Upon touring the plant yesterday, “It's an exciting day for the state of Ohio,” Governor DeWine said. “We just got a good look at the future.”

The coronavirus pandemic has delayed the Endurance’s release, Burns said, but not too much. The first registration-worthy Endurances will start rolling off the assembly line in mid-2021. Before that, Lordstown is on track to build 30 beta vehicles for crash and durability tests by December.

Unlike Tesla’s Cybertruck, preorders for the Endurance are strictly commercial customers, and that’s by design. “We're starting exclusively in the commercial market,” Burns said. ServPro has put in an order for 1,200 units and Clean Fuels Ohio ordered 250.

With only fleet and commercial sales for the foreseeable future and no retail sales, there is no need for a dealer network right now, Burns said. He hinted that lease programs and partnerships with fleet management companies may be announced soon.

Organizations considering the Endurance should get in line now — orders placed today might be looking at mid-2022 for delivery, Burns said.

Ad Loading...

While Lordstown planned for 20,000 units a year, with significantly more demand the plant could be retooled for more production. When GM owned the Lordstown plant it was producing 400,000 Chevrolet Cruze models a year at its peak.

“We can't just go from zero to 400,000, but if the demand is there, we want to meet as best we can,” Burns said.

The Endurance is opening up the most important vehicle segment in the U.S. to electrification. With no track record, will the trucks perform at levels work truck customers need?

“We built (the Endurance) so it can tow and haul just as much as an internal combustion engine counterpart,” Burns said of the Endurance, which has an electric motor at each wheel and no transmission or axles.

The Endurance has all-wheel drive with only four moving parts in the drive train, four in-wheel hub motors.

Image courtesy of Lordstown Motors.

Yet the big unknown when it comes to electric trucks is how towing and payload affect range. Burns said the estimated unladen range for the Endurance is 250 miles.

Ad Loading...

For ICE-powered pickups the EPA uses an empty truck to determine fuel economy. The same factors — weight, speed, weather, size and shape of load, and wind resistance — will greatly affect electric trucks too, Burns said.

With too many variables, the range question will only be answered with miles of various on-road usages. “Once the vehicles are out in mass, we’ll better understand how much range is lost, just like we do for cold weather’s effect on electric cars,” he said.

One range factor to consider, Burns said, is that most pickups are empty 90% of the time. “The average fleet pickup truck drives 60 to 70 miles per day,” he said. “We think that’s a good range buffer to get most jobs done.”

The $52,000 Endurance has a production head start on seven announced all-electric pickup models due within two years. At the end of that timeline, Lordstown will have to contend with the electric Ford F-150.

Burns wouldn’t speculate too much on what the world will look like for Lordstown Motors after Ford releases the electric F-150. He stressed there are too many unknowns at this point in terms of specs and performance compared to the traditional ICE-powered F-150.

Ad Loading...

“We know we'll already have a good lead with millions of miles on the road, which is important with new technology like an electric pickup truck,” he said. “It's going to be tough to catch the early leaders because those learnings quickly help (the vehicle) evolve.”

“That’s why we really want to get out there and become the leader in our lane of electric full-size work trucks.”

The development of the Endurance actually began in 2016, with the Workhorse W-15 electric pickup prototype. Burns left his post as CEO of Workhorse Group, makers of electric trucks including the C-650 electric step van, to form Lordstown Motors. Lordstown paid Workhorse $12.2 million to license its technology. 

“In the modern automotive world, it's very hard to have a clear lane. We think we do, and it’s the electric full-size truck,” said Burns. “The appetite, the pent-up demand for an electric work truck is there, and we want to fulfill it.”


Originally posted on Automotive Fleet

More Green Fleet

Artist rendering of an ev charging facility from an overhead view.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 16, 2026

EV Realty Opens Major Truck Charging Hub in California’s Inland Empire

EV Realty’s San Bernardino Powered Properties’ truck charging hub, which has now opened, can serve over 200 medium- and heavy-duty trucks per day.

Read More →
Closeup photo of an EV charger plugged into an EV, with white logo for WEX.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 13, 2026

WEX Launches Solution to Close the EV At-Home Charging Visibility Gap for Fleets

WEX unveiled its EV At-Home with Vehicle Fraud Protection, which ensures accurate and secure reimbursement for at-home charging.

Read More →
Woman and two men standing holding paperwork agreements they have signed with logos for Daimler Truck, Toyota, and Volvo over their heads.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 6, 2026

Toyota Motor Corporation to Join Daimler Truck & Volvo Group in Fuel Cell Joint Venture Cellcentric

Toyota intends to join Daimler Truck and Volvo Group as an equal shareholder in Cellcentric. All three shareholders intend to further strengthen Cellcentric as a leading manufacturer of fuel cell systems for heavy-duty commercial applications.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Terminal truck hauling a container trailer with a cargo ship and windmill in the background.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 3, 2026

Volvo Penta Electric Drivetrain Powering Terminal Tractors

Volvo Penta and Volvo Financial Services (VFS) have partnered to support one of Northern Europe's largest shipping and logistics companies in its ambition to transition to electric terminal tractors.

Read More →
Two men stand together holding a certificate award with large commercial trucks in the background.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 1, 2026

PacLease in Dallas Awarded Dallas-Fort Worth Clean Cities Award

PacLease in Dallas, Texas, received a Clean Cities Award from the Dallas-Fort Worth Clean Cities Coalition. PacLease invested in two fast-charging pedestals, one located in Dallas and the other at its sister location in Grand Prairie.

Read More →
Step van driving down road with large orange headline +20,00,000 miles.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseApril 1, 2026

Workhorse Electric Vehicles Surpass 20 Million Miles

More than 1,100 Workhorse trucks, buses, and shuttles have displaced the use of 2.3 million gallons of gas and prevented the emissions of 45 million pounds of CO2. Those vehicles have amassed more than 20 million miles combined.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Image of a row of EV charging stations and an inset image of a screenshot from a computer and from a smartphone showing charging data.
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseMarch 31, 2026

Independent Review Validates Greenlane’s Data Security & Compliance

Greenlane's security controls were independently verified as operating effectively across a nearly year-long audit period. Achieving both SOC 1 and SOC 2 Type 2 compliance demonstrates that Greenlane meets the data security standards enterprise fleet operators require from a charging partner.

Read More →
Man standing in front of an image of a blue-tinted box truck with logos for Work Truck and Truck Chat, and a yellow headline, Meet Harbinger's HC Series Cab.
Green Fleetby Wayne ParhamMarch 30, 2026

Harbinger CEO Explains New Low-Cab-Forward Truck

Join Work Truck as we tour Harbinger Motors’ new HC Series cab, a medium-duty low-cab-forward work truck available in electric and hybrid configurations, with CEO John Harris.

Read More →
Computer screen with software and numbers displayed.
Green Fleetby Wayne ParhamMarch 27, 2026

ChargePoint Launches Tools to Improve EV Charger Management

ChargePoint’s new Premier Care supports large or complex charging networks by providing concierge services to streamline operations, and the new Support Portal transforms the customer support experience into a transparent self-managed hub.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Work Truck Week 2026 Work Truck from the Show Floor FCCC
Green Fleetby News/Media ReleaseMarch 16, 2026

FCCC Collaborates with Roush On Next-Gen Engine

FCCC will work with Roush Power Systems, a recently formed division of Roush, to integrate the new GM 6.6L gas engine into its chassis products across a range of applications and markets.

Read More →