Upgrade fatigue: For the generations that have had to swap records for cassette tapes, tapes for CDs, CDs for MP3 players, and finally just pay for music subscriptions on our phones, the idea of switching from gas to EVs may evoke some…feelings.
Yeah…no: Take those feelings and apply them to entire commercial diesel truck fleets and you get “hard pass” vibes.
At least one company sees you and has come up with a solution that doesn’t require a full swap, just an add-on.
Plug-n-play: Revoy has come up with a battery pack that fits between the trailer and cab of a Class 8 semi:
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Instead of waiting for the batteries to recharge, the packs are switched out in a process the company claims takes around five minutes, which is on par (maybe faster?) with filling a diesel tank.
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Swap stations will have clean bathrooms, places to grab food, and other amenities truckers are used to at typical truck stops.
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If the planned route is longer than the battery pack allows, the pack can be dropped off, and the truck can continue on its own diesel power.
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The battery packs come equipped with a motor that drives the wheels, providing an electric push to the cabs a-la the way trains have combined diesel and electric motors.
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The battery packs also have sensors and auto-intelligence corrections to prevent rollovers, jackknifing, and flips.
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The wheels don’t just “go,” but they have brakes to help with “stopping” as well.
Coming soon? The company had a rollout on Arkansas-Texas routes in October last year with further progressions planned this year, and given the media push, I’d expect to hear more news about that soon.
Justifiable questions: The X account The All Day Trucker had plenty of skeptics bring up some of the same thoughts I had regarding additional length, weight — which takes away from payload capacity — and maneuverability.
Some comments I don’t agree with include built-in obsolescence.
Crystal ball time: It might be the product manager in me, but I clearly see how this product can/will evolve into a fully-automated, self-driving electric cab.
Foot in the door: The market penetration method is also brilliant because electric Class 8 trucks are expensive, and the company claims this solution is at least break-even.
A link in the chain: The product’s physical placement is between the trailer and diesel cab, and it’s easy to see how the cab, not this battery pack, will be the item that gets disconnected in the chain during future iterations.
The company has not said as much, that I could find, but much like Teslas are collecting data for their self-driving feature, I would be shocked if this company is not doing the same thing.
Student becomes the master: And what better way for the machine to learn than shadowing a real driver?
Design for the win: The innovative product design is what gets my attention here, as it sidesteps two of the biggest issues with EVs: charge time (just swap it out) and range.
Geoscientists beware: I don’t see the EV revolution taking out fossil fuel-powered vehicles in the next five years, but innovations like this certainly make the horizon feel a bit closer and demand us geoscientists maintain skillsets that are transferable to all energy sectors.
To learn more about Revoy, go here, here, and here.