Connect with us

Published

on

We are finally getting a sneak peek of Honda’s first 100% electric SUV arriving next year, the Honda Prologue. With pre-sales starting later this year, here’s what you can expect regarding pricing and range.

Honda unveils its first 100% electric SUV

Honda unveiled the Prologue last October, co-developed by General Motors. The Japanese automaker has high hopes the Prologue can spearhead Honda’s EV offensive in the US.

“The arrival of the all-new Honda Prologue is a pivotal moment for the brand as Honda begins the transition to our zero-emissions future,” Lance Woelfe, AVP of Honda Sales at America Honda, said.

Unveiling the details behind it Thursday, Honda’s first electric SUV is expected to start in the upper $40,000s (before incentives and tax credits) with an anticipated 300 miles of EPA range.

The Prologue will be Honda’s first volume electric SUV as it advances toward 2 million EV sales globally by 2030. With the help of GM’s Ultium platform, the 2024 Honda Prologue looks to get the Japanese automaker back on track.

Honda-first-electric-SUV
Honda Prologue Elite (Source: Honda)

Meet the 2024 Honda Prologue

Although the 2024 Prologue is built on GM’s Ultium platform (the same used for upcoming models including Blazer EV, Equinox EV, and Silverado EV), you can tell it’s a Honda through and through by its design.

For one, the front and rear suspensions have been optimized by Honda to deliver a sporty and refined driving experience.

Honda-first-electric-SUV
Honda Prologue Elite (Source: Honda)

Honda’s EV also features a newly designed name badge representing the Prologue’s clean and modern design. Compared to the new Hyundai or Kia electric models, the Prologue is very simple and straightforward.

The Prologue sits low and wide with available 21″ wheels, the largest ever offered by Honda. At 192″ long, 64.7″ tall, and 78.3″ wide, the electric SUV is 8″ longer than the CR-V at (185″) and slightly wider (74″).

Honda-first-electric-SUV
Honda Prologue Elite (Source: Honda)

The lengthy wheelbase of 121.8″ provides ample interior space with up to 136.9 cubic feet. Inside is filled with features found in the Civic, HR-V, Accord, CRV, and Pilot, including large buttons and knobs.

Honda’s interior designers have maximized storage with a two-tiered center console, a flexible multi-use tray, and a pair of massive cup holders (enough for 32 oz bottles). The Prologue also features Honda’s first wireless smartphone charger as standard.

Honda-first-electric-SUV
Honda Prologue Elite interior (Source: Honda)

Behind the rear seats, the Prologue offers 25.2 cu-ft of cargo space, enough for three large golf bags. With 60/40 rear seats that can be folded flat, the cargo space extends to 57.7 cu-ft.

Honda-first-electric-SUV
Honda Prologue Elite interior (Source: Honda)

The EX trim features black and charcoal or charcoal and light gray upholstery, while the Touring adds black with a memory driver seat and leather-wrapped steering wheel. Meanwhile, the Elite trim comes with black and charcoal, brown and black, or charcoal and light gray leather seating, sport mode, and 21″ wheels.

The mid-size SUV will be offered in both single-motor (FWD) and dual-motor (AWD) configurations with three trims – EX, Touring, and Elite.

Powertrain and features

The Prologue will be Honda’s first SUV to feature Google built-in standard with on-the-go services like Google Assistant, Google Maps, and Google Play.

Honda included a tech-rich cabin featuring dual screens, including an 11″ instrument display and an 11.3″ touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility. The Elite trim gains a 7×3″ head-up display (HUD). The Prologue will also include OTA updates to enable the latest software and features.

The dual motor Prologue comes standard on the Elite (also available on EX and Touring), generating an estimated 288 hp and 333 lb-ft of torque.

Honda Prologue walkaround (Source: Honda)

With an 85 kWh lithium-ion battery, the Prologue can gain 65 miles of range in about 10 minutes with DC fast charging of up to 155 kW.

The available sport mode enables quicker throttle and steering response, firmer steering, enhanced brake power, and more.

Every Prologue buyer can choose from three available charging packages, including:

  • Home Charging Station (11.5 kW) and $100 Public Charging Credit, plus $500 Installation Incentive (via (HHE – see below)
  • Portable Charging Kit (7.6 kW) and $300 Public Charging Credit, plus $250 Installation Incentive (via HHE)
  • $750 Public Charging Credit

In addition, Honda Home Electrification can connect buyers with proven installers through dedicated energy advisors who can help select the best solution for their needs.

Honda’s first electric SUV will begin rolling out in early 2024, with pre-sales starting later this year. Full pricing will be announced closer to launch.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

Delhi-ghtful! India mulls 2035 ICE ban, blocks fuel sales to older vehicles

Published

on

By

Delhi-ghtful! India mulls 2035 ICE ban, blocks fuel sales to older vehicles

In a bold bid to combat the crippling air pollution crisis in its capital, Delhi, Indian lawmakers have begun high-level discussions about a plan to phase out gas and diesel combustion vehicles by 2035 – a move that could cause a seismic shift in the global EV space and provide a cleaner, greener future for India’s capital.

Long considered one of the world’s most polluted capital cities, Indian capital Delhi is taking drastic steps to cut back pollution with a gas and diesel engine ban coming soon – but they want results faster than that. As such, Delhi is starting with a city-wide ban on refueling vehicles more than 15 years old, and it went into effect earlier this week. (!)

“We are installing gadgets at petrol pumps which will identify vehicles older than 15 years, and no fuel will be provided to them,” said Delhi Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa … but they’re not stopping there. “Additionally, we will intensify scrutiny of heavy vehicles entering Delhi to ensure they meet prescribed environmental standards before being allowed entry.”

Making it prohibitively difficult for Dehli’s residents to own and operate older, presumably more polluting vehicles is one way to reduce harmful emissions and air pollution, but Sirsa’s team isn’t just targeting newer vehicles. They’re also planning to deploy more than 900 electric transit buses, part of a larger plan to replace 5,000 of the city’s 7,500 total bus with lower- or zero-emission options this year alone.

Advertisement – scroll for more content

The Economic Times is reporting that discussions are underway to pass laws requiring that all future bus purchases will be required to be electric or “clean fuel” (read: CNG or hydrogen) by the end of this year, with a gas/diesel ban on “three-wheelers and light goods vehicles,” (commercial tuk-tuks and delivery mopeds) potentially coming 2026 to 2027 and a similar ban privately owned and operated cars and bikes coming “between 2030 and 2035.”

Electrek’s Take

2025 Xpeng G6 all-electric SUV with 5C ultra-fast charging “AI batteries” launched in China
Xpeng EV with Turing AI and Bulletproof battery; via XPeng.

After a Chinese government study linked air pollution caused by automotive exhausts and coal-fired power plants to more than 1.1 million deaths per year in 2013, the nation’s government took serious action, shuttering older coal plants and imposing strict emissions standards. The country also incentivized EV adoption through license-plate lotteries favoring electric cars and a nationwide EV mandate set to kick in by 2030.

The results were astounding, and the technological innovations that have come from an entire nation of talented engineers all “pulling in the same direction” have put the West to shame, with Western auto executives repeatedly sounding the alarm and lobbying for tariffs and other protectionist policies on both sides of the Atlantic.

To see India make move towards a gas and diesel ban like this, and on such an aggressive timeline, can only mean that they’ve been paying attention … and America is about to fall even further behind.

SOURCE: India Times; featured image by Sumita Roy Dutta.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

Parker launches Mobile Electrification Technology Center training program

Published

on

By

Parker launches Mobile Electrification Technology Center training program

Last week, Parker Hannifin launched what they’re calling the industry’s first certified Mobile Electrification Technology Center to train mobile equipment technicians make the transition from conventional diesel engines to modern electric motors.

The electrification of mobile equipment is opening new doors for construction and engineering companies working in indoor, environmentally sensitive, or noise-regulated urban environments – but it also poses a new set of challenges that, while they mirror some of the challenges internal combustion faced a century ago, aren’t yet fully solved. These go beyond just getting energy to the equipment assets’ batteries, and include the integration of hydraulic implements, electronic controls, and the myriad of upfit accessories that have been developed over the last five decades to operate on 12V power.

At the same time, manufacturers and dealers have to ensure the safety of their technicians, which includes providing comprehensive training on the intricacies of high-voltage electric vehicle repair and maintenance – and that’s where Parker’s new mobile equipment training program comes in, helping to accelerate the shift to EVs.

“We are excited to partner with these outstanding distributors at a higher level. Their commitment to designing innovative mobile electrification systems aligns perfectly with our vision to empower machine manufacturers in reducing their environmental footprint while enhancing operational efficiency,” explains Mark Schoessler, VP of sales for Parker’s Motion Systems Group. “Their expertise in designing mobile electrification systems and their capability to deliver integrated solutions will help to maximize the impact of Parker’s expanding METC network.”

Advertisement – scroll for more content

The manufacturing equipment experts at Nott Company were among the first to go through the Parker Hannifin training program, certifying their technicians on Parker’s electric motors, drives, coolers, controllers and control systems.

“We are proud to be recognized for our unwavering dedication to advancing mobile electrification technologies and delivering cutting-edge solutions,” says Nott CEO, Markus Rauchhaus. “This milestone would not have been possible without our incredible partners, customers and the team at Nott Company.”

In addition to Nott, two other North American distributors (Depatie Fluid Power in Portage, Michigan, and Hydradyne in Fort Worth, Texas) have completed the Parker certification.

Electrek’s Take

electric bobcat track loader
T7X all-electric track loader at CES 2022; via Doosan Bobcat.

With the rise of electric equipment assets like Bobcat’s T7X compact track loader and E10e electric excavator that eliminate traditional hydraulics and rely on high-voltage battery systems, specialized electrical systems training is becoming increasingly important. Seasoned, steady hands with decades of diesel and hydraulic systems experience are obsolete, and they’ll need to learn new skills to stay relevant.

Certification programs like Parker’s are working to bridge that skills gap, equipping technicians with the skills to maximize performance while mitigating risks associated with high-voltage systems. Here’s hoping more of these start popping up sooner than later.

SOURCE | IMAGES: Parker Hannifin.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

ReVolt extended range electric semi trucks score their first customer

Published

on

By

ReVolt extended range electric semi trucks score their first customer

Based on a Peterbilt 579 commercial semi truck, the ReVolt EREV hybrid electric semi truck promises 40% better fuel economy and more than twice the torque of a conventional, diesel-powered semi. The concept has promise – and now, it has customers.

Austin, Texas-based ReVolt Motors scored its first win with specialist carrier Page Trucking, who’s rolling the dice on five of the Peterbilt 579-based hybrid big rigs — with another order for 15 more of the modified Petes waiting in the wings if the initial five work out.

The deal will see ReVolt’s “dual-power system” put to the test in real-world conditions, pairing its e-axles’ battery-electric torque with up to 1,200 miles of diesel-extended range.

ReVolt Motors team

ReVolt Motors team; via ReVolt.

The ReVolt team starts off with a Peterbilt, then removes the transmission and drive axle, replacing them with a large genhead and batteries. As the big Pete’s diesel engine runs (that’s right, kids – the engine stays in place), it creates electrical energy that’s stored in the trucks’ batteries. Those electrons then flow to the truck’s 670 hp e-axles, putting down a massive, 3500 lb-ft of Earth-moving torque to the ground at 0 rpm.

Advertisement – scroll for more content

The result is an electrically-driven semi truck that works like a big BMW i3 or other EREV, and packs enough battery capacity to operate as a ZEV (sorry, ZET) in ports and urban clean zones. And, more importantly, allows over-the-road drivers to hotel for up to 34 hours without idling the engine or requiring a grid connection.

That ability to “hotel” in the cab is incredibly important, especially as the national shortage of semi truck parking continues to worsen and the number of goods shipped across America’s roads continues to increase.

And, because the ReVolt trucks can hotel without the noise and emissions of diesel or the loss of range of pure electric, they can immediately “plug in” to existing long-haul routes without the need to wait for a commercial truck charging infrastructure to materialize.

“Drivers should not have to choose between losing their longtime routes because of changing regulatory environments or losing the truck in which they have already made significant investments,” explains Gus Gardner, ReVolt founder and CEO. “American truckers want their trucks to reflect their identity, and our retrofit technology allows them to continue driving the trucks they love while still making a living.”

If all of that sounds familiar, it’s probably because you’ve heard of Hyliion.

Hyliion electric semi truck

Hyliion Hypertruck ERX; via Hyliion.

Before it changed its focus to develop Carnot-cycle generators and gensets, Austin-based Hyliion built a number of EREV Peterbilts using the then-new 15L Cummins diesel as a generator and employing the same sort of battery and e-axle-arrangement as ReVolt.

In addition to being located in the same town and employing the same idea in the same Peterbilt 579 tractor, ReVolt even employs some of the same key players as Hyliion: both the company’s CTO, Chandra Patil, and its Director of Engineering, Blake Witchie, previously worked at Hyliion’s truck works.

Still, Hyliion made their choice when they shut down their truck business. ReVolt seems to have picked up the ball – and their first customer is eager to run with it.

“Our industry is undergoing a major transition, and fleet owners need practical solutions that make financial sense while reducing our environmental impact,” said Dan Titus, CEO of Page Trucking. “ReVolt’s hybrid drivetrain lowers our fuel costs, providing our drivers with a powerful and efficient truck, all without the need for expensive charging infrastructure or worrying about state compliance mandates. The reduced emissions also enable our customers to reduce their Scope 2 emissions.”

Page Trucking has a fleet of approximately 500 trucks in service, serving the agriculture, hazardous materials, and bulk commodities industries throughout Texas. And, if ReVolt’s EREV semis live up to their promise, expect them to operate a lot more than 20 of ’em.

SOURCES | IMAGES: ReVolt; via Power Progress, TTNews.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Trending