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Navistar's Electric Truck Named 'eStar,' Production Begun in Indiana RV Plant

Navistar International's electric truck is called "eStar." It's being assembled by its Monaco RV subsidiary in Wakarusa, Ind., and it's priced at $150,000, less various government monetary grants meant to encourage purchases of the non-polluting vehicle

Tom Berg
Tom BergFormer Senior Contributing Editor
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May 14, 2010
Navistar's Electric Truck Named 'eStar,' Production Begun in Indiana RV Plant

(Photos by Tom Berg)

5 min to read


Navistar International's electric truck is called "eStar." It's being assembled by its Monaco RV subsidiary in Wakarusa, Ind., and it's priced at $150,000, less various government monetary grants meant to encourage purchases of the non-polluting vehicles

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. Those are among the pieces of information announced during a May 13 webinar hosted by Navistar executives followed by an open house in a town hungry for jobs.

The Class 3 truck will initially come only with a 14- or 16-foot fiberglass van body aimed at package delivery fleets, but utility bodies, shuttle buses and ambulances might be added later. Deborah Willig of FedEx Express, a kick-off customer, said the company will deploy four of the vans in its fleet in Los Angeles, where eStar's high maneuverability will work well on congested streets and its zero tailpipe emissions will earn purchase grants from California's Air Resources Board. She spoke by phone from FedEx headquarters in Memphis.

So far 40 of the vans have been built at the Monaco plant in northern Indiana. For now workers are assembling eStars from kits sent from the United Kingdom by Modac, the vehicle's designer and manufacturer of the truck's powertrain. But Navistar will eventually source most parts in the Unites States, a stipulation of a $39.2 million grant from the Department of Energy to the company to kick off the program, according to Patrick Davis, manager of DOE's vehicle technologies program, who was one of the presenters of the webinar that originated in a Monaco conference room in Wakarusa.

The government's view

DOE wants to see annual production and sales of 1 million electric and hybrid vehicles by 2015, Davis said. The U.S. uses 22 million barrels of oil a day, almost 13 million imported, and 82 percent of that is consumed by motor vehicles. Domestic energy generates electricity that powers eStars and other electric-drive trucks and cars. Although smokestack emissions from the burning of coal can equal tailpipe emissions from cars, it still replaces imported oil. And cleaner forms of power generation used in many areas of the country make the electric vehicle program environmentally viable, he said.

Last August, President Barack Obama visited Indiana to announce the grant and boost the concept of "clean energy" vehicles as one way to wean America off imported petroleum and cut emissions of greenhouse gases, noted Shane Terblanche, Navistar's general manager for electric trucks. Navistar showed off the eStar on Capitol Hill in September, and in March, took one on a tour along Route 66 that resulted in enthusiastic receptions.

"The long-term aim is to develop technologies that will provide Americans with greater freedom of mobility and energy security, with lower costs and lower impacts on the environment," Davis said. An eStar will save about 10 tons of carbon dioxide a year compared to a diesel-powered van, Treblanche added. It is a "purpose-built truck that balances the needs of the environment and the needs of businesses," he said.

Davis said various DOE and other federal and state programs will offset eStar's $150,000 purchase cost. "We will pay up to half the incremental cost" of an electric vehicle, which for eStar is almost $100,000. There's also a $7,500 electric-vehicle tax credit, plus the CARB grants in California. The truck's low operating cost compared to a diesel-powered walk-in van should also make it attractive to fleets, especially as the cost of motor fuel rises.

Truck details

An eStar's 300-volt lithium-ion battery "cassette" includes 16 packs, and it sits between frame rails below the floor, Treblanche said. Its range is about 100 miles and top speed is 50 mph. Batteries can be recharged in six to eight hours, and the cassette can be removed and replaced in about 20 minutes if need be. The 70-kilowatt (102-horsepower) motor and driveshafts are mounted between the rear wheels. Gross vehicle weight rating is 12,100 pounds and payload is 4,000 pounds.

A drive of an empty eStar in the streets of Wakarusa by this reporter showed it to be nimble, quick and quiet. The truck's turning circle is 36 feet, allowing U-turns in very limited spaces. It accelerates fast and runs almost silently, with only a soft powertrain whine coming from behind while underway and a whirring heard from the electro-hydraulic power steering pump as the eStar sits still. The system generates electric power when a driver takes his foot off the accelerator and presses the brake pedal.

The truck's quietness is a safety concern, and Navistar engineers are discussing this with federal officials, said Darren Gosbee, director of development for hybrid and electric powertrains. "We might end up playing music" to avoid sneaking up on pedestrians, he said. People in Wakarusa didn't give the swoopy looking truck a glance because they're accustomed to seeing eStars running around since the assembly program began, he said.

In Elkhart County

The program will create many jobs in Elkhart County, known for production of recreational vehicles whose sales have plunged during the recession. Unemployment has been more than 20 percent, but is easing as the economic recovery progresses. Monaco added 40 jobs for the eStar program and that might increase to 700 as the program ramps up. Not all will be here, as they will be spread out along the eStar's supply chain. For example, batteries are being made by A123 Systems of Livonia, Mich., and other electrical, mechanical and body parts will come from other sources in the States.

The rounded cab now comes with other parts from the UK, but it's similar to the fiberglass noses of the motor homes produced in Elkhart County, so could be made locally, Treblanche said. Navistar people are working out this and many other sourcing details. Serious interest has come from at least 20 fleets, and Navistar officials anticipate more as the program grows and eStar becomes known among fleet executives who want to go "green." Monaco expects to build about 400 in the first year, and the plant could assemble 4,000 to 5,000 annually.

The eStar is an "amazing opportunity" due to its green characteristics, and it's an actual product in a largely nebulous clean-vehicle world, commented Dave Meisel, transportation director for Pacific Gas & Electric, who addressed the webinar audience from the company's headquarters in San Francisco. "There are a lot of different technologies out there, but a lot of it is promises and marketing claims. We'd like to see more technical data" from other suppliers. It's likely that PG&E will try the eStar in its logistics fleet, but he didn't commit to any orders.

More info: www.estar-ev.com

This story corrected at 11:45 a.m. EDT 5/14/2010 to correct the spelling of Elkhart County.



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