| I am specifically talking about your urban/suburbanites that commute daily in their trucks, and use the bed once or twice a year for small home projects. The rest of the year, a car or SUV would be more than sufficient. The point isn't that these people should not have a truck, the point is they do not need a truck and therefore the factors that influence their purchase are different than professionals that use the truck and bed often. It's the same with anything - take kitchen knives for example. A professional is going to be looking for something very different than an amateur home cook. The F-150 Lightning was billed as a jobsite, professional's truck. However, it's much better suited for the other type of truck buyer in the US. > says my next-door neighbor, who operates a small construction company He's probably not driving 2+ hours to a worksite out in the middle of no where, hoping there's a charging station in the next-door field. The Lightning only gets a claimed 230 miles range after all... 320 with the extended battery with an unloaded bed. Your average F-150 boasts 700+ miles range, for comparison. Glad it works for him - but the Lightning really isn't suited for that type of work. |
The very definition of truthy. Sounds good, even without a shred of evidence to back it up.
> A professional is going to be looking for something very different than an amateur home cook.
I guess. The home cook might be inclined to buy an absurdly priced knife. The pro and competent home cooks both will reach for a basic Victorinox knife for everyday use.
> He's probably not driving 2+ hours to a worksite out in the middle of no where,
Most work trucks are driven around town. There's a niche for people who travel hundreds of miles in a day, but it's not the most common use case at all. The Lightning works great for >90% of all the usual things trucks get used for.