- Diesel engine appears to charge only, with electric motors providing propulsion
- The formula balances military fuel infrastructure with stealthier electric propulsion
- GM previously abandoned truck hybrids but this year confirmed PHEVs are coming
General Motors has turned a Chevrolet Silverado heavy-duty pickup truck into a combat-ready hybrid.
Unveiled this week at the annual meeting of the Association of the U.S. Army (AUSA), the GM Next Gen tactical vehicle prototype is based on the off-road-focused Chevy Silverado 2500HD ZR2. But instead of the gasoline or diesel V-8 engines of civilian models, the tactical truck combines a smaller 2.8-liter turbodiesel inline-4 with a 12-module battery pack and electric motors powering the front and rear axles.
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2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD ZR2
GM’s light-on-details description of the project sounds similar in approach to the plug-in hybrid system used in the defunct Chevrolet Volt, in which the engine is primarily used as a generator for electric motors that provide most of the actual propulsion. In this case, they might provide all the propulsion, which would make it a series hybrid.
Assuming the modules in this battery pack are the same large-format pouch-cell modules GM previously termed Ultium, this would offer about the same 102-kwh battery capacity—enough to go more than a hundred miles all-electric, even in a bulky armored military truck.
GM abandoned hybrids of any kind a few years ago, but earlier this year it indicated it would bring plug-in hybrid powertrains back.
The electrified powertrain offers several advantages, according to the company, including the ability to silently ingress and egress from dangerous areas, and a lower thermal signature that also makes the truck harder to detect. Use of a diesel engine also makes logistics less complicated, since the truck can utilize existing military fueling infrastructure if charging isn’t available, GM argues.
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GM Defense Next Gen tactical vehicle prototype
The battery pack can also be used as a power source for equipment, and the truck retains many of the driver aids from civilian models, including antilock brakes, stability control, and a 360-degree camera system. It’s available in two-, four- and six-seat configurations.
GM has tried to repurpose some of its other EV tech for military applications. In 2021, the automaker announced plans to build prototypes of an all-electric military vehicle based on the GMC Hummer EV, and unveiled a concept version in 2023. Earlier this year, GM also said it was supplying batteries to the military for research purposes, but mainly looking at energy storage rather than electric vehicles.