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Sundancer330

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https://electrek.co/2021/11/19/ford...-buyers-which-means-itll-be-sold-out-forever/

Ford’s Lightning order numbers don’t include fleet buyers, which means it’ll be sold out forever

November 19, 2021

Ford is going hard on electrification, with a solid showing at this year’s LA Auto Show and big reservation numbers for the F-150 Lightning. Ford has declared its intent to be the biggest EV maker in the world with a big increase in production in the next few years.

But even with all of that, it’s still not enough. By our estimates, with Ford’s planned production ramp, F-150s won’t be readily available without a wait for the better part of the decade.

Ford has upped its production plans for the F-150 before and announced big investments into adding EV production capacity. But as we’ve said before, it looks like the company’s going to have to do it again.

Currently, Ford is planning to build 15,000 F-150s in 2022, 55,000 in 2023, and 80,000 in 2024. After that, the company will shift to its new EV-only TE1 truck platform.

But that’s 150,000 trucks on the current platform, and at the beginning of this month, Ford shared that it has 160,000 reservations for the F-150 Lightning, up from 120,000 in August. And Ford now says the number is “approaching 200,000,” but that’s a fuzzy number so let’s stick with 160,000 for now.

So not only is Ford’s entire production plan for this model sold out three years ahead of time, but in the last 2.5 months, it has sold at least six months’ worth of its 2024 run rate. And that’s despite the reservation holders knowing that they have a three-year wait ahead of them.

But that’s not all. Ford confirmed to us at the LA Auto Show that this 160,000 number does not include commercial/fleet customers through Ford’s “Ford Pro” program. An entire trim level of the F-150 Lightning, the base $39,974 “Pro” model, is aimed towards these customers.

Not that speed is a main selling point for a work truck, but the sucker does have plenty of power
Ford also said it would not preferentially treat high-optioned orders, and rather produce a mix of option levels. Surely Ford will want to keep its fleet customers happy, so some sales will be diverted in that direction.

Even if we account for attrition in reservations – people who reserved on a lark and end up getting a different vehicle instead – it still seems like demand is much higher than planned production. Surely, when the truck hits the road and word of mouth gets out – and when reservation lead time is shorter (will it ever be?) – more orders will materialize from those who are currently on the sidelines.

So put all of this together, and you’ve got a situation where, with current production plans, this truck is going to be sold out for the foreseeable future.

It’s a better problem to have than lack of demand, but it’s still a problem. Those customers are ready to jump in but just don’t have a product available to them, and might end up being lost to another company.

Or, worse, they’ll buy a gas-powered vehicle that will keep polluting the atmosphere for another decade. According to two surveys, the majority of Lightning reservation holders will be coming over from gas vehicles, which means the more Lightnings that get sold, the less gas we will burn, which is better for everyone.

But in the mentioned timeframe, despite incredible demand for the Lightning, Ford will continue selling millions of gas F-150s, each of which will emit about 100 tons of carbon over their lifetimes, along with other pollutants that form smog and harm health. And these higher-polluting vehicles should be the first priority to get off the road for pollution reduction purposes, rather than the small hatchbacks that most companies started their EV transitions with.

Ford states that it wants to ramp as quickly as demand will allow (there’s that “demand” word again), but that the main limiting factor is the availability of components for electrification. Ford was coy when we asked which specific components the company was talking about… but we all know it’s the batteries.

Ford is spending tens of billions on battery and electric truck production, so it’s preparing for this eventuality. But it still feels like its production numbers are a significant underestimate of the amount of demand that could be out there for a more available vehicle.

Ford did state Thursday that it plans to produce 600,000 EVs in 2023, which means just under 10% of those will be Lightnings. Currently, the gas F-150 makes up about 15-20% of Ford’s total vehicle production (900k out of 5-6 million globally), which means the Lightning will be a lower proportion of Ford’s EV sales than the F-150 is of its overall sales. Given that Ford has fewer planned electric models than gas models for 2023, one would think the Lightning could make up a larger proportion than the F-150, so there’s a disconnect there.

But this 600k number is new as of yesterday, and Ford’s Lightning production plan is a few months old now. We hope to see another announced rise in planned Lightning production – preferably before 2025 – and we think an announcement might come soon on that front, as Ford seems confident about its EV efforts in our discussions.

Because otherwise, you’re just never going to see one of these trucks on a dealer lot. They’ll all be pre-ordered years ahead of time.
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sotek2345

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Yeah, I have been worried this was the case from the beginning. The real question is which will be prioritized and how many fleet orders that have. If the fleet numbers are high enough, Ford might not be planning enough gen 1 lightnings to even meet existing reservations.
 

Sgt Beavis

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At this point, I think anyone ordering now will be waiting for the next gen lightning, which is due in 2025.
 

sotek2345

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At this point, I think anyone ordering now will be waiting for the next gen lightning, which is due in 2025.
Could be worse if Ford has 200k fleet orders and decides to fill those first before retail orders.

Even if they fill them in parallel, that means only half of the production going to retail orders and much longer wait times than most are expecting.
 

Sgt Beavis

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Could be worse if Ford has 200k fleet orders and decides to fill those first before retail orders.

Even if they fill them in parallel, that means only half of the production going to retail orders and much longer wait times than most are expecting.
Perhaps so.
 

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Tony Burgh

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Could be worse if Ford has 200k fleet orders and decides to fill those first before retail orders.

Even if they fill them in parallel, that means only half of the production going to retail orders and much longer wait times than most are expecting.
That would be a stupid marketing decision. But that doesn’t rule it out.
 

Skynetf150

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None of you have any idea what you are talking about please stop telling people they are definitively going to wait until 2025 or get a next gen lightning with their reservation number. It's all nonsense Ford just said they are upping production of EVs to 600k by 2023 worlds second largest EV producer by then. You are brain dead if you think only 55k out of the 600k EVs ford makes in 2023 will be lightnings.
 

PungoteagueDave

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There will NOT be a next gen Lightning in 2025. Who comes up with this drivel? All of the above is complete rot. Disregard, move along folks. Ford is NOT going to do much more than minor updates to a three-year old completely new platform, full stop. Especially an EV platform.. Tesla is still making essentially minor tweaks to its Model S, which was introduced in 2011 and first delivered in 2012, and still seems reasonably competitive, with a huge order backlog (currently into 2023). It has been refreshed twice, but the basic form is unchanged. Ford should be able to get ten years out of the both the Mach E and Lightning platforms before significant reengineering.
 

sotek2345

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There will NOT be a next gen Lightning in 2025. Who comes up with this drivel? All of the above is complete rot. Disregard, move along folks. Ford is NOT going to do much more than minor updates to a three-year old completely new platform, full stop. Especially an EV platform.. Tesla is still making essentially minor tweaks to its Model S, which was introduced in 2011 and first delivered in 2012, and still seems reasonably competitive, with a huge order backlog (currently into 2023). It has been refreshed twice, but the basic form is unchanged. Ford should be able to get ten years out of the both the Mach E and Lightning platforms before significant reengineering.
The Gen 2 Lightning for model year 2026 comes from this Article which talks about it using a new platform - TE1 (likely leveraging the new plants Ford is building in Kentucky and Tennessee).

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-ford-doubles-lightning-production-193019622.html
 

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shutterbug

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The Gen 2 Lightning for model year 2026 comes from this Article which talks about it using a new platform - TE1 (likely leveraging the new plants Ford is building in Kentucky and Tennessee).

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-ford-doubles-lightning-production-193019622.html
https://insideevs.com/news/509726/rumor-ford-new-bev-platforms/
Trucks/SUVs EV platform
In the case of larger electric vehicles, a new "TE1" truck architecture is expected in late 2025.​
It might be used in the "redesigned" Ford F-150 Lightning (which will enter the market in early 2022 using a heavily redesigned F-150 platform).​
The other models might be Lincoln Navigator and Ford Expedition:​
"Ford could also use the new TE1 platform for electric versions of the Lincoln Navigator and Ford Expedition utility vehicles, the sources said."​
There is also an option to use a platform from Rivian in a midsize pickup (Ford is a shareholder of Rivian).​

There are an awful lot of "might" and "could" in these rumor stories. The simple fact is none of us know. Ford might use a different platform, or they could change their mind between now and then. Even if they do use a new platform for F150 in a few years the difference between it and 2022 may not be all that readily apparent to most of us.
 

jefro

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Unless some huge fleet buyer shows up with a ton of cash, I can't see Ford ONLY producing the Pro model.
 

Snakebitten

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With things like the recent Hertz order for 100,000 Teslas, it doesn't take a genius to see that Ev's are hitting some form of "critical mass acceptance" (and demand). That and the now infamous Ford Lightning reservation success and I'm now convinced that Ford (and others) will be increasing the planned production of vehicles like these.

Or put another way, while it MIGHT be true that Ford can't increase the initial production run for the Lightning, they absolutely would ramp up as much as is feasibly possible. So when I read articles about production 3 or more years out, I can't consider them credible unless it's from the horses mouth.
3 years in this wacky unpredictable world is longer than 3 years was in the past, if you know what I mean.

I also have a bit of skepticism when an article starts posting how I am going to die from the amount of carbon that just ONE F150 gas truck will emit in its lifetime. (liberal paraphrase to make a point) The article reveals its agenda when it takes on that narrative.
We all already know why Ev's exist. And obviously we agree enough to be part of this amazing new demand for the product. Can't I join the EV club without getting the tee-shirt?
 

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I think Fords plans are limited to the actual factory buildings needed to produce large amounts of product.
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