Minnesota startup sees a growing niche market for electric work trucks

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Minnesota startup sees a growing niche market for electric work trucks

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by Frank JossiFebruary 8, 2021

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Zeus Electric Chassis will make medium-duty work trucks designed to be easily customizable for government or business fleets. Credit: Zeus Electric Chassis / Courtesy


Zeus Electric Chassis intends to specialize in customizable medium-duty trucks for commercial and government fleets.


An under-the-radar electric vehicle startup in Minnesota has signed a lease for manufacturing space and is finalizing its first sale.

Automotive engineer Robert Grinstead spent eight years designing and developing the prototype for Zeus Electric Chassis. The company will make a medium-duty work truck designed to be easily customized with a variety of tools such as boom lifts. Chassis refers to the load-bearing frame that a vehicle is built on.

The product is aimed at what’s still an underserved niche in the fast-growing electric vehicle market: flatbeds, cherry pickers, delivery trucks and other medium-duty class 4, 5, and 6 vehicles, which are a step up from the biggest pickup but a notch or two below a big rig.

“There’s not a lot of competitors that are out there with an all-electric, purpose-built, medium-duty truck that’s designed to easily integrate different configurations with work packages on them,” said Mark Rawson, chief operating officer of the California Mobility Center, a paid consultant and early supporter of Zeus that works to connect electric vehicle startups with California fleet owners.

Zeus’ relationship with the center has paid off with a pending sale to the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, which is expected to purchase five Zeus Electric Chassis vehicles for $1.2 million by the end of the month.
“I think it’s pretty cutting edge,” said Casey Fallon, director of supply chain and fleet operations for the Sacramento Municipal Utility District. Zeus offered the utility a fully electric vehicle with all the same configuration options standard with conventional medium-duty work vehicles. “It just really made sense.”

The company plans to assemble the vehicles at a new facility in the St. Paul suburb of White Bear Lake using components from a variety of Midwest companies. The batteries will be from a German firm, Webasto.
The ability to customize the vehicles, known in the industry as “upfitting,” is a key differentiator for Zeus. The practice is common in the medium-duty truck market, where companies or governments might buy a small fleet of vehicles and customize each one with a specific set of tools or add-ons.

For Grinstead, the company is a culmination of nearly 30 years of experience working on and off with electric vehicles. He worked on his first electric vehicle project in the 1990s in Michigan, converting pickup trucks to run on electricity for a pilot project. After moving to Minnesota, he worked for the fire truck manufacturer Rosenbauer America before becoming an independent consultant and focusing his energy on developing an electric chassis.

Outside of his focus on an all-electric vehicle, Grinstead aimed to produce a highly modular design starting with three basic truck configurations that can combine with a host of backside applications. Zeus customizes battery size based on projected use, aiming for a battery range of about 160 miles.

“I think they’re going to have a heads-up on the market as it develops,” said Rawson. Government and commercial fleet owners in California, in particular, are looking for electric work vehicles to help reduce emissions and meet climate targets. “You’ve got a motivated customer base.”

The competition includes companies like Motiv Power Systems, Lightning eMotors, and BYD that retrofit gas vehicles to electric. Other auto and truck companies have models serving specific work truck niches outside Zeus Electric’s target markets. And eventually, mainstream auto manufacturers with truck divisions that will offer their medium-duty electric models.

“Sooner or later they will focus on these specialty vehicles, but right now, if we focus on the specialty vehicles, we can establish a market and we can establish our brand,” said Zeus Electric CEO Wayne Kugel, a former executive at supercomputer pioneer Cray Research.

Minnesota is home to one of the country’s leading electric bus manufacturers, New Flyer, but it’s hardly a hotbed for the automotive industry. Kugel said the Twin Cities’ location works because most of its components come from Midwest companies, including a chassis, frames, and cabins from Marion Body Works in Wisconsin and engines from Parker Hannifin Corp. of New Ulm. Tires, brakes and other components also will also come from outside firms, he said.

Kugel said the company’s focus in 2021 would be on building the vehicles for the Sacramento Municipal Utility District before moving on to other clients.
TAGGED: electric vehiclesMinnesotatransportation


SOURCE: Energy News


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Zeus Electric Truck Chassis
Zeus Electric Chassis is a Minnesota owned & operated manufacturer specializing in environmentally responsible electric trucks. They are designed by Zeus Electric Chassis with a long and extensive background in the medium duty truck, specialty vehicle and electric vehicle industries. They are modular, ultra-low maintenance, rugged purpose-built electric and hybrid vocational work truck chassis that will perform for at least a DECADE. They are also engineered for maximum performance and ease of repair should a vehicle become damaged

The trucks could be equipped with an articulating arm and bucket used by utility workers to repair power lines. Additionally, the truck is expected to have an electric range of 180 miles, enough for urban utilities. The truck is rated at 5-ton payload capacity 19.5GVWR with an average cost of 11 cents per mile.

PRIMARY (CORE) PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS
PRODUCT TYPE: CAB / CHASSIS
PRIMARY PURPOSE: VOCATIONAL / SERVICE TRUCK CHASSIS
CONFIGURATIONS: MULTIPLE CABIN TYPES, CUSTOM CHASSIS WHEELBASES, PERIPHERAL OPTIONS TO MEET CUSTOMER NEEDS
POWER SYSTEM: LITHIUM ION (105 KWH, 140 KWH, 175 KWH)
PROPULSION: 235 eHP, 3,430 LB/FT TORQUE, ALL WHEEL DRIVE
SUSPENSION: MERITOR IFS / IRS –UP TO 22,300 POUND GVWR
Download the current specifications REV B in PDF form by CLICKING HERE.

The goal is to sell the medium-duty electric-powered truck to utilities but will have many diverse uses. The Zeus Electric Chassis is designed to be lightweight but able to withstand the stress of an articulating arm. The design utilizes the same ideas from ladder trucks used by firefighters that undergo the same stresses. Potential customers include universities, airports and municipal governments that rely on trucks during the day but can park them for charging at night.

The design is balanced power for optimal performance and reliability. Engineered to out-perform duty and cycle. Please don’t hesitate to use Startracks Trucks Contact Form to submit an inquiry to learn more about this new technology.
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Engineered Specifications
Engineering Performance Specifications:
  • Range: 180 mile (289 kilometers) – fully laiden
  • Horsepower: 231 (p)
  • Torque: 1,244 lb.ft (1,686Nm) (p)
  • Maximum Payload: 10,000 lbs (8,845 kg)
  • Maximum GVWR: 19,500 lbs (15,195 kg)
  • Maximum Velocity: 78 mph (125 km/h)
Engineered Chassis Specifications:
  • Drive Type: Liquid-cooled, dual motor, all-wheel drive
  • Battery: LiFePo4; 173 (kw) (p)
  • Construction Type: HSLA; ladder frame; modular
  • Frame RBM (minimum): 1.02million lb/in
  • Frame RBM (maximum): 1.9 million lb/in
  • Front Suspension: IFS; air; 8,000 lb capacity rating (standard)
  • Rear Suspension: IRS; air; 14,000lb rating (standard)

Engineered Cabin Specifications:
  • Military-grade 5,000 and 6,000 series aluminum super structure and skins
  • 3 mm thickness doors and side canopy skins
  • Engineered for safety, reliability and customization
  • 2-door extended cab model (standard)
  • Available 4-door cab model
  • Impact resistant composite and glass reinforced hood and grille
  • 12V power system that is independent from the propulsion system
  • Diesel powered coolant system
Chassis Reliability:
  • Limited lifetime, 10-year chassis warranty
  • Limited lifetime, 10-year cabin warranty
  • Limited lifetime, 10-year paint warranty
  • Limited lifetime, 10-year power system warranty

Outline of specifications along with CAD image of chassis in PDF format: CLICK HERE
Additional information with potential applications in PDF format: CLICK HERE
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Additional 3D renderings in PDF format for your review: CLICK HERE


SOURCE: StarTrucks



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Last edited:

FutureBoy

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Glad to see someone addressing that market.

Are they putting the batteries up front where the engine would traditionally go? Or possibly under the cab? Looks like the back half is just a straight ladder frame with no batteries. Probably that way for maximum customization potential without accidentally damaging the batteries. Got to wonder how it will perform though on snow/ice or other less than perfect conditions.
 

Crissa

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Yeah. Can't drive renders. Well, youmcan, but the virtual fleet isn't where the money (or the feds) are.

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