OldButStillJeeping
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Eric
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2021
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 517
- Reaction score
- 932
- Location
- Northwest Wisconsin
- Vehicle(s)
- 2021 JTM, '92 Jeep YJ, 2017 F250 4WD, 1996 RAM D150 4x4, 2006 Jeep Liberty 4x4
- Occupation
- Tree farmer now. Retired first responder.
Of the choices in this poll. 5.7 for me. But I wouldn't trade in my 3.6 for one anytime soon. The Pentastar 3.6 V6 is pushing commercial vehicles into the 250,000 mile plus ranges. It is actually a very good engine.
But the new straight 6 looks promising. But I'll wait a couple years, so they can clean out the bugs. First year new engines are a risk. Usually. Almost nobody gets it right 100% in the first year.
Hybrid seems like a better choice than full electric. Stranded on the roadside is full electric.
I'll bite the bullet and go full electric when the vehicle manufacturers agree to an easily removable and replaceable battery pack size. Standardized across the board. Like AA batteries in godzilla size. They simply add battery stations to the current gas stations. You drive in your Tesla, BMW, Jeep, Toyota, etc, and they swap the batteries with a small standardized crane and put in a fully charged battery. 5 minutes. Like snapping batteries in your Milwaukee drill. And you are on your way after you use the restroom and grab a Slurpee and a bag of chips. Just like a gas tank fill-up time frame. That's how it will be someday. And that's how I will accept full-electric.
But the new straight 6 looks promising. But I'll wait a couple years, so they can clean out the bugs. First year new engines are a risk. Usually. Almost nobody gets it right 100% in the first year.
Hybrid seems like a better choice than full electric. Stranded on the roadside is full electric.
I'll bite the bullet and go full electric when the vehicle manufacturers agree to an easily removable and replaceable battery pack size. Standardized across the board. Like AA batteries in godzilla size. They simply add battery stations to the current gas stations. You drive in your Tesla, BMW, Jeep, Toyota, etc, and they swap the batteries with a small standardized crane and put in a fully charged battery. 5 minutes. Like snapping batteries in your Milwaukee drill. And you are on your way after you use the restroom and grab a Slurpee and a bag of chips. Just like a gas tank fill-up time frame. That's how it will be someday. And that's how I will accept full-electric.
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