Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 91: F-150 Lightning Overview, So Long VW Passat

F-150 Lightning Overview

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 91

Broadcast date: July 25, 2021

Guest: Brian Bell

F-150 Lightning Overview, So Long VW Passat

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start off the show by discussing  the impending discontinuation of the Volkswagen Passat midsize sedan, as well as VW’s other product initiatives. Brian Bell, Marketing Manager for the Ford F-150, joins us to talk about the revolutionary new F-150 Lightning pure-electric pickup truck . Tom has a “which vehicle sold better?” quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including our Consumer Guide test-drive review of the 2021 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon 392.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Test Drive: 2020 Volkswagen Passat 2.0T SEL

Test Drive: 2021 Volkswagen ID.4

Quick Spin: 2021 Volkswagen Arteon SEL R-Line

Test Drive: 2020 Volkswagen Golf TSI

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 82: EV Smartphone Apps, 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning

Five Things That Make the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning a Great Work Truck

Test Drive: 2021 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon 392

Einspritzung Madness! A Gallery of Classic Car Ads Featuring Fuel Injection

For GREAT deals on a new or used Chevy truck check out Sierra Truck Center TODAY!

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 75; Electrify America HomeStation Charger, 2021 Ford Bronco Sport

Ford Bronco Sport

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 75

Broadcast date: April 5, 2021

Guest: Nina Huesgen

Electrify America HomeStation Charger, 2021 Ford Bronco Sport

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the their test-drive experiences with the new-for-2021 Ford Bronco Sport. Nina Huesgen, Senior Manager for the Electrify Home and eCommerce business units at Electrify America, joins us to talk about electric-vehicle charging and Electrify America’s new HomeStation residential EV charger. Tom has a tricky “which vehicle has a higher horsepower rating?” quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a Test Drive review of the 2021 Ford F-150 PowerBoost hybrid and a look back at the 2009 Saturn Sky Red Line.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

First Look: 2021 Ford Bronco

Electrify America

Chevrolet to unveil a K5 Blazer electric crate motor build at SEMA360, but it isn’t exactly a powerhouse

1977 Chevrolet K5 Blazer electric crate motor conversion.
The Chevrolet Performance 1997 K5 Blazer electric crate motor build, set for reveal at SEMA360. Photo: Chevrolet Pressroom.

With all the excitement surrounding the return of the Ford Bronco, clearly there is plenty of market interest in retro SUVs. And given the promise of the electric crate motor concept as a near-bolt-on solution to give a new jolt of life and relevance to vintage vehicles that are sitting around in barns with non-running engines, Chevrolet’s choice of a K5 Blazer to showcase their forthcoming Electric Connect and Cruise eCrate package at SEMA360 is an unsurprising move.

But here’s what is surprising: in an environment of EV hype centered around sky-high horsepower and torque stats and 0-60 acceleration in just a couple of seconds, are we really supposed to be impressed with an electric crate motor that produces just 200 horsepower and 266 pound feet of torque?

Yes, you read that right. Although GM does say that they are “evaluating additional eCrate packages with higher-performance options,” those are the horsepower and torque figures cited in their press release on the K5 Blazer build ahead of SEMA360, the all-virtual 2020 answer to the elbow-to-elbow-packed live SEMA Show that, in normal years, takes place annually at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Sure, endlessly boasting about horsepower and torque escalations has become a cliché at SEMA, where, for example, you can perennially expect Mopar to stage a noisy reveal of their latest over-1,000-horsepower hell-something gas crate engine.

But it’s hard to imagine that 200 horsepower won’t seem pretty limp to the SEMA crowd, especially considering that the 1977 K5 Blazer, in its original gas-powered configuration, weighed close to 3,700 pounds.

Nevertheless, the very existence of GM’s electric crate motor program is, in principle, an exciting development for those who like the idea of a modern, clean solution for breathing new life and relevance into cool old cars and trucks.

According to Chevrolet, the show build for SEMA360, which they have dubbed the K5 Blazer E, preserves as much of the stock vintage Blazer as possible, connecting an electric motor and 400-volt battery pack from the Chevrolet Bolt EV while leaving the rest of the original K5 Blazer drivetrain untouched, including the transfer case, driveshaft, and axles. 

The vehicle’s original fuel gauge becomes the state-of-charge display for the battery—a nice touch that, if it becomes standard across GM electric crate motor conversions, will support preservation or original instrument panels as one of the more important elements of the retro vibe of a vintage vehicle’s interior.

Vintage K5 Blazer instrument panel in the Chevrolet Performance electric crate motor conversion for SEMA360
The Chevrolet Performance electric crate motor build preserve’s the K5 Blazer’s vintage instrument panel—including the fuel gauge, which becomes the state-of-charge monitor for the EV battery pack. Photo: Chevrolet Pressroom.

While the press releases on the K5 Blazer EV build and on the Connect and Cruise package do not specify a cruising range—which would obviously vary depending on what vehicle a buyer retrofits—we can perhaps anticipate a rough frame of reference from the 259-mile range expected, according to GM authority, for the 2021 Chevy Bolt.

Although one could probably expect less range than that in a larger vehicle like a K5 Blazer, range gains are certainly reasonable to expect with time, especially as GM looks ahead toward integrating more advanced technologies like their Ultium battery system into their electric crate motor packages, which GM estimates could achieve ranges of 400 miles or more.

Meanwhile, if the K5 Blazer EV build is already making visions dance in your head like electrified Christmas sugarplums of bringing beloved vintage Chevys, Pontiacs, Buicks, Oldsmobiles, or GMCs a new charge of life in an increasingly electrified automotive world, GM says you can expect the Electric Connect and Cruise crate motor package to be available in the second half of 2021.

About The Author

Bill Hayward

Bill Hayward, a writer, marketer, and car enthusiast, is editor and publisher of AutoNewsblaster. Originally a native of the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., he currently resides in South Central Pennsylvania. Contact: auto.enthusiasts.news@gmail.com or 717-968-0883.