Lordstown Endurance electric pickup production to begin at former GM factory in late 2020
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Lordstown Motors, the electric truck startup that purchased GM’s recently-closed Lordstown, Ohio, assembly plant has opened the order books for the first vehicle it will build there.
The company said it is aiming to have the first all-electric pickup on the market when it begins deliveries of a commercial fleet version of the Lordstown Endurance by the end of 2020, when Ford- and Amazon-backed startup Rivian plans to launch a consumer-focused luxury electric pickup.
Lordstown Motors was spun-off from Ohio-based Workhorse and is licensing its technology for the Endurance. The company has so far released only renderings of the vehicle, but says its four-wheel-drive system will use a hub-mounted motor at each wheel and that electric tools will be able to draw power from the battery in lieu of needing generators at job sites.
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Pricing for the fleet version of the Endurance has been set at $52,500 before any tax credits and a $1,000 deposit is required to secure a reservation. The announcement came the same day as the much-anticipated reveal of Tesla's Cybertruck electric pickup.