Automotive

Daimler unveils heavy-duty eCascadia and medium-duty eM2 electric trucks

Daimler unveils heavy-duty eCascadia and medium-duty eM2 electric trucks
The new Freightliner eCascadia (left) and eM2 106 will enter North American test fleets later this year
The new Freightliner eCascadia (left) and eM2 106 will enter North American test fleets later this year
View 2 Images
Most of the Daimler Trucks electric offerings in North America are shown in this lineup
1/2
Most of the Daimler Trucks electric offerings in North America are shown in this lineup
The new Freightliner eCascadia (left) and eM2 106 will enter North American test fleets later this year
2/2
The new Freightliner eCascadia (left) and eM2 106 will enter North American test fleets later this year

Daimler Trucks is establishing a global organization for electric mobility called the E-Mobility Group. To kick that off, the company announced that its division in the United States, Freightliner, will be adding two new electric commercial trucks to its offerings: the Freightliner eCascadia and the eM2 106.

The Freightliner electric trucks will add to the production Mercedes-Benz eActros and the FUSO eCanter trucks as well as the Mercedes-Benz Citaro city bus and Thomas Built Saf-T Liner C2 Jouley school bus. All of these will now fall under the newly-formed E-Mobility Group.

Daimler says that over the course of 2018, the company will hand over an innovation fleet of 30 units of the two new Freightliner electric trucks to its first customers in the US for fleet and operations testing. The two new trucks are slated for the North American region and are based on already-established models.

The Freightliner eCascadia, based on the Cascadia class 8 truck, offers 730 horsepower (544 kW) through its motors. Those are powered by 550 kWh of batteries, which give the truck a fully-loaded range of up to 250 miles (400 km). Charging to 80 percent can be achieved within 90 minutes, resulting in an additional 200 miles (320 km) of range.

The Freightliner eM2 106 is a local distribution truck and last-mile delivery service vehicle. Its power output can be as high as 480 horsepower (358 kW). Battery size is 325 kWh for a total of 230 miles (370 km) of expected range. Recharge time to 80 percent is about 60 minutes, adding 184 miles (300 km).

Source: Daimler Trucks

4 comments
4 comments
WB
Daimler ist so screwedd ...With Tesla attacking the luxury segment and semi with products that are way cheaper and running circles around them.. they are the dinosaurs looking at the meteorite coming in..same with the others
paul314
200 miles should be just fine for local distribution. If they could top up while unloading the batteries would hardly every get low.
Tyro
Nice. I am glad to see large, established companies developing and releasing products like this. This could be excellent for the regional and local trucking industry.
One great advantage I see here with Daimler (Freightliner) is already well versed in large scale manufacturing and trucking. They have a large network already established.
Daimler has also been generating a lot of cash flow so they can afford R&D.
Another one I am interested to follow is the unit that Cummins revealed a little while ago.
Aaron Turpen
WB: Tesla has produced no commercial trucking product at all. They haven't even given a real timeline for doing so. They can't even make a car at promised volumes. Daimler is ahead of the game and already established with commercial buyers and with an already-established network of service centers, service training facilities, and more. Tesla has.. none of that.
So who's screwed again?
Oh and the "way cheaper" comment. lolz Good one.