Hybrid Trucks
Manufacturers make progress on hydraulic systems while electric-drive trucks
gain orders.
Tom Berg Senior Equipment Editor
The world of hybrid trucks continues to move fast, with several manufacturers
now building various configurations and others announcing plans for production.
Meanwhile, the coordinating body for the hybrid movement says that two of its
working groups have selected builders and suppliers to assemble prototype
vehicles for field evaluations.
Walk-in van chassis with diesel-electric drive systems are currently available
from Freightliner Custom Chassis Corp. and Workhorse Custom Chassis, while
medium-duty cargo and utility trucks are available, or soon will be, from
Freightliner, Navistar International, Kenworth and Peterbilt. One plug-in
diesel-electric hybrid has come on the market, and a heavy trash collection
truck using a diesel-hydraulic drive system is ready for production (see news
items that follow).
As in automobiles and light trucks, hybrid-drive systems for commercial and
military trucks offer great savings in fuel economy but carry hefty price
premiums. Hybrids have cost 50 percent to 100 percent more than trucks with
straight diesel powertrains, but costs have begun to come down as volume
production gets unde way. In the meantime, federal tax rebates and other
government support promise help for operators willing to try the new technology.
The Hybrid Truck Users Forum says several of its working groups are proceeding
toward acquiring specialty vehicles for evaluations by fleets, and that another
working group continues to study test data and proposals for highway tractors.
Suppliers for parcel delivery and trash trucks have been identified for
ordering, with both electric and hydraulic hybrid systems represented.
"Hydraulic hybrids are coming on strong, and that provides some healthy
competition" in the field, says Bill Van Amburg, HTUF's program executive and a
senior vice president at Calstart-WestStart in Pasadena, Calif. "Hydraulics
offer the potential for lower cost, but there is a weight penalty with the
accumulators and other equipment, which developers are trying to improve.
Overall, hydraulics are 18 to 24 months behind electric hybrid systems."
For various reasons, electric systems, primarily those from Eaton Corp., were
the first to go into regular service for FedEx Express and United Parcel
Service. FedEx now operates nearly 100 diesel-electric hybrid walk-in vans with
Eaton electric-drive systems, assembled by Freightliner Custom Chassis. While
the fleet saw some teething problems, Eaton and FCCC say the units now are 97
percent reliable, and FedEx reports considerable success in fuel economy and
emissions reduction.
HTUF's Parcel Working Group will acquire three Class 6 diesel-hydraulic delivery
trucks for testing by UPS, FedEx Ground and Purolator Courier. Hybra-Drive, the
chosen supplier of the hydraulic hybrid system, says it hopes the vehicles will
demonstrate a 60 percent reduction in fuel use. Ford will supply the chassis for
the project. An evaluation vehicle will undergo dynamometer and other testing
this fall, and it and the two others will begin field testing early next year.
FedEx Ground, a sister company to FedEx Express, has said it's going the
hydraulic-hybrid route because the walk-in vans are bought by independent
contractors who might be inclined to tinker with the drive mechanisms. That
might be risky if they were high-voltage electric systems. FedEx Ground has
other development projects in the works, as do the other test fleets, and will
share their experiences with other HTUF members.
While most commercial hybrid trucks are diesel-powered, at least one, from Azure
Dynamics and Ford, uses a 5.4-liter V-8 gasoline engine. FedEx Express has
ordered several of these for use in California, where cleaner gasoline emissions
are more acceptable to authorities.
Meanwhile, HTUF's Refuse Working Group has accepted proposals from industry
teams to build six hydraulic and electric trash collection trucks for fleet
testing. The group selected Crane Carrier Co. as the chassis builder; CCC is
working with ISE Corp. on a diesel-electric system and with Bosch Rexroth Corp.
on a diesel-hydraulic system. The ISE system is a series hybrid, meaning its
engine never directly propels the truck; it drives an electric generator that
charges batteries that propel the truck through motors.
Bosch Rexroth's hydrostatic system, which is successfully used in heavy
articulated transit buses, is a parallel-type hybrid, meaning the truck will run
on diesel or electric propulsion or both. The Bosch apparatus will replace the
transmission in CCC's LET2 heavy low-cab-forward chassis, which will also be
used for the ISE electric system.
The trucks are scheduled for testing starting early next year by sanitation
departments in three cities, according to HTUF. New York City will take three
electric and one or two hydraulic trucks, while Chicago and Houston will each
take one electric hybrid truck.
Members of HTUF's Class 8 Working Group are discussing road tractors and how
hybrid systems could best be used by them. Sleeper-cab tractors can readily use
electric power produced through regenerative braking and an efficient
diesel-generator setup. The one working example is Peterbilt's 386 Hybrid
tractor that uses a Caterpillar C13 engine, an Eaton electric-drive system and a
Delphi sleeper air-conditioning system; it's being evaluated by Wal-Mart
Transportation.
Wal-Mart has ordered another diesel-electric hybrid tractor from a team
consisting of International, which will supply a ProStar sleeper-cab, Cummins,
which will provide an ISX or ISM diesel, and ArvinMeritor, which will supply an
electric propulsion system. That tractor is scheduled to enter fleet testing
sometime next year or in 2010.
This HTUF working group is also looking at a regional-service tractor whose
greater amount of stopping and starting might be better able to take advantage
of a hybrid's regenerative braking characteristics. It would probably be able to
gain more fuel economy than the over-the-road sleeper-cab tractor, whose
potential fuel economy gains are in the 5 to 7 percent range.
Public utility members of HTUF were the first to get prototype hybrid trucks
into service for testing, with 23 units put into the hands of companies in the
U.S. and one in Canada. Built by International on 4300-series chassis, the Class
6 "trouble trucks" have Eaton's electric-drive systems that feature regenerative
braking and high-output generation of power from large alternators driven by the
trucks' DT466 diesels. Tests show the hybrids save 14 to 60 percent in fuel,
largely because they and their crews can work at job sites using power from
batteries while the engines stay off. International has begun getting repeat
orders for the trucks from satisfied users.
At least one plug-in hybrid truck is now on the road and more are headed for
service. Odyne Corp., an electric-equipment manufacturer, and Dueco Inc., a
Terex equipment dealer, assembled the trouble truck. Its batteries can store 35
kilowatt-hours of power, most of it taken on while plugged into a high-voltage
outlet prior to a day's or night's work. An on-board electric generator is
driven by the engine through the transmission's power take-off is for recharging
in the field.
Finally, General Motors has begun selling its 2-Mode Hydrid system in Chevrolet
Tahoe and GMC Yukon sport-utility vehicles. The system, with its highly
sophisticated Electronically Variable Transmission, pushes fuel economy of the
traditionally thirsty SUVs into the low 20-mpg range, making them viable in
these days of high-priced gasoline. The 2-Mode Hybrid is scheduled for
installation in Silverado and Sierra pickups later this summer, which could be
useful in light commercial service. (We will report on our drive of a Tahoe
hybrid in an upcoming issue.)
Manufacturers are progressing on plans for production of hybrids, and report
orders for them and alternative-fueled trucks. Among the recent announcements:
UPS places "largest order ever" for hybrids and CNG vans from FCCC -
Freightliner Custom Chassis Corp. said the order from United Parcel Service
consists of 200 hybrid electric and 300 compressed natural gas vehicles, and
will be manufactured on FCCC's MT45 and MT55 walk-in van chassis. UPS will use
the "green" vehicles for daily delivery operations across the United States,
supplementing its current fleet of conventional diesel-powered package cars.
Each of the MT45 and MT55 vans with Eaton 44-kW hybrid electric systems may
realize a $4,500 tax credit, FCCC said. Fleet experience with more than 160
previously built vans, including 25 with UPS, shows that they save 40 percent in
fuel and cut exhaust emissions by 90 percent. FCCC said it produced its first
diesel-electric hybrid chassis in 2004. The 200 newly ordered chassis will use
6.7-liter 200-horsepower Cummins ISB engines, along with the Eaton hybrid
systems that include 6-speed UltraShift automated mechanical transmissions.
Each CNG-fueled chassis with Cummins 5.9-liter 195-horsepower B Gas Plus natural
gas engine may qualify for up to $25,000 in tax credits. CNG usually costs far
less per equivalent gallon than diesel fuel and also drastically cuts emissions.
FCCC said it built its first CNG-fueled chassis in 2000. Some of the 300 new
vehicles will be rated at 29,000 pounds GVW, and all will have Allison 1000/2000
automatic transmissions with parking pawls.
AEP orders 18 hybrid utility trucks from International - American Electric
Power, a large public utility company, has ordered 18 more International DuraStar hybrid trucks following positive experiences with four prototype units.
The trucks use MaxxForce DT diesels with Eaton Corp.'s hybrid electric drive
system, whose charging system and batteries enable the truck and its crew to
work with the engine shut down much of the time. Engine-off operation saves as
much as 60 percent in fuel, a test of 24 prototypes showed. In addition to
operating savings, the Class 7 hybrids qualify for federal tax credits of
$12,000 each.
AEP will place 13 of the hybrids with its Indiana Michigan (I&M) Power
subsidiary and the rest with other operations in the Midwest. I&M tested two of
the prototypes and found them reliable and economical, according to its
president, Helen Murray. "It's a good business decision and the right thing to
do for the environment," she said during a ceremony marking the purchase at
Navistar International's plant near Springfield, Ohio, on Earth Day, April 22.
Workers at the plant are building the hybrids on the regular assembly line, and
Altec utility bodies with man-buckets are installed nearby.
Peterbilt readies Model 320 hydraulic hybrid for production - Peterbilt Motors
said it will begin building its 320 low-cab-forward trash-collection truck with
Eaton's Hydraulic Launch Assist, or HLA, late this year. It has some orders in
hand, and while it declined to name the customer and the number, it's known that
Waste Management is acquiring some of the Class 8 straight trucks for testing.
HLA captures braking energy by pressurizing hydraulic fluid and sending it to
accumulators, which store it at up to 5,000 psi; upon startup, the fluid is
released back to the driveline pump, which becomes a motor and helps launch the
truck from a standstill.
Tests show that retarding cuts brake wear by 50 percent, while hydraulically
assisted launching saves up to 30 percent in fuel and cuts exhaust emissions by
40 percent. The system puts as much as 2,550 pounds-feet into the driveline,
which, when combined with torque from a Cummins ISM diesel, makes for quick
acceleration with the heavy truck. To gain more attention, Peterbilt displayed
the 320 hybrid at the recent Waste Expo in Atlanta. The 320 is not yet on the
Internal Revenue Service's list of vehicles certified for tax rebates, so it's
not yet known how much it might be qualified for.