RE: Electric Hummer is on the way!
RE: Electric Hummer is on the way!
Tuesday 28th July 2020

Delayed electric Hummer still on the horizon

1,000hp, 11,500lb ft and 0-62mph in three seconds is promised - you expected Hummer to return modestly?



Really, the Hummer of the 2000s was quite a prescient vehicle. Oh, how we mocked back then, with this unnecessarily large, wantonly ugly, staggeringly profligate 4x4 waddled about the place. Even as it came to the UK in 2007 the Hummer was seen as just a bit daft, but now look; you can't move for bold-as-brass, enormous SUVs. They were really onto something...

For 2021 the Hummer will return, and this is the first look at it. Unsurprisingly the styling hasn't been meddled with too much, the iconic grille flanked by recognisable headlights on what appears to be a massive vehicle. The Hummer aesthetic didn't need to change because, to a large extent, the world changed to meet it; styling across the industry has become a bit more overt and brash over the past decade, so why would Hummer change now?


The big difference is coming under the bonnet, where V8s are being ditched for electric propulsion; yep, this is the Hummer EV. Not just any old electric Hummer, either, like those novelty golf cart lookalikes that struggle up the incline to the 15th; this one is going to have up to 1,000hp and up to 11,500lb ft, apparently, which sound more like the outputs for a heavy goods vehicle than a civilian SUV.

Hummer proclaims the new car its "quiet revolution - with zero emissions and zero limits." It's a "super truck", no less, which it's hard to argue with given a projected 0-62mph time of three seconds. They even have LeBron James doing the adverts, and he surely wouldn't get involved with anything less than super. He is, after all, a gamechanger, just like we're promised this car will be...

Perhaps because it can afford to be, GMC has been pretty coy about exact Hummer information thus far. "Details about the GMC Hummer EV's remarkable on- and off-road capabilities will be shared closer to its reveal" is all they're saying, the reveal in question due this autumn. Production won't commence until another 12 months later, presumably because it's a lot simpler to make something that looks like a Hummer for the 2020s - but quite a different challenge to actually manufacture a 1,000hp, battery-powered one. We'll be following with interest...



 

Author
Discussion

eein

Original Poster:

1,539 posts

286 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
... range 3cm

kambites

70,330 posts

242 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
It's certainly likely to set a new record for (lack off) efficiency. hehe

take-good-care-of-the-forest-dewey

7,071 posts

76 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
IIRC the civilian hummer wasn't even a hummer... Simply a styling re-body of a very poorly regarded SUV.

I recal they tried to flog them to mountain rescue in the UK. Didn't sell any.

kambites

70,330 posts

242 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
There were two "civilian" Hummers, the H2 and H3. Both based on (different) shared GM platforms.

TheOrangePeril

797 posts

201 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
kambites said:
There were two "civilian" Hummers, the H2 and H3. Both based on (different) shared GM platforms.
As the names imply, there were actually three...

H1, based on the military Hummer.
H2, based in the same platform as the Chevy Suburban.
H3, based on a smaller GMC SUV platform.

kambites

70,330 posts

242 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
I assumed by "civilian", he wasn't including the H1. smile

Glenn63

3,701 posts

105 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
I’m sure there is a company already doing H1 electric conversations think Arni has one. If I had the funds and space I’d love a proper H1 for some tom foolery.

Krikkit

27,747 posts

202 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
kambites said:
I assumed by "civilian", he wasn't including the H1. smile
Yeah you wouldn't call an H1 anything like a normal vehicle really.

ETA: Looking online I'm quite surprised how many cheap HMMMVV's there are for sale now that they're coming out of the military - 5000USD would get you one in decent nick in the US, I bet it'd make a great farm runaround instead of a rotten old defender/series landy.

Edited by Krikkit on Thursday 30th July 12:06

Drl22

803 posts

86 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
I’m all for SUV’s and fast variants too but the Hummer has always suggested to me an heir of desperation about the owner. I’m not sure if that makes sense and it’s hard to explain to you if it doesn’t.

StuntmanMike

12,851 posts

172 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
Having driven the military Hummer is a good thing it’s a different car.

Because they are without doubt the shoddiest crap I’ve ever driven.

StuntmanMike

12,851 posts

172 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
kambites said:
I assumed by "civilian", he wasn't including the H1. smile
Yeah you wouldn't call an H1 anything like a normal vehicle really.

ETA: Looking online I'm quite surprised how many cheap HMMMVV's there are for sale now that they're coming out of the military - 5000USD would get you one in decent nick in the US, I bet it'd make a great farm runaround instead of a rotten old defender/series landy.

Edited by Krikkit on Thursday 30th July 12:06
Having done many miles in both, a defender will wipe the floor with one.

The cheap price is no surprise give the compromised drive.

tgx

147 posts

171 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
"IIRC the civilian hummer wasn't even a hummer... Simply a styling re-body of a very poorly regarded SUV."

It started off as a GMC truck chassis. One of the best selling in the US, the same hat spawned the Tahoe and the Yukon,
also very successful SUV's. I give my '99 high marks at 250k miles and extremely low operating costs as does
my friend with 300k on his...with original engines and transmissions. Tossing around 'poorly regarded' is relative,
ask the owners.

Personally I didn't like the Hummer's because their interior space is smaller than the Yukon or Tahoe. It kept to
the fashion mantra of pay more get less, which is what the Hummer was, a fashion accessory. This one will be the same.

I can't wait till we start talking about electricity guzzlers. That power comes from somewhere.

biggbn

29,451 posts

241 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
Watched a lot of tests online and H3 gets really good reviews for its off road capability. I like them and would have one over a generic 4wd, but am aware of the flaws. The five pot whilst characterful was no ball of fire but its not that kind of truck.

FourWheelDrift

91,606 posts

305 months

Thursday 30th July 2020
quotequote all
I thought all electric cars were hummers?