Bollinger Deliver-E Van First Look: Scaling Up Rivian's Amazon Prime Van to XL
And it boasts lowest floor in the heavy-delivery biz.Electric pickup trucks that can spin in place doing tank turns or carry a telephone pole in a pass-thru frunk grab headlines, but they don't necessarily pay the bills. A solid order for 100,000 Amazon Prime vans will keep Rivian's lights on as its R1T and R1S civilian truck and SUV catch on in the rapidly expanding electric utility vehicle marketplace, and now electric Class-3 truck startup Bollinger Motors is looking for a similar fleet-sales safety net by announcing the catchily named Deliver-E van.
Why All the Interest in Electric Delivery Vans?
Bollinger's own figures suggest that replacing a fleet of gas- and diesel-powered vans with electric Deliver-E vans could drop a fleet owner's total cost of operation by 15-25 percent over a ten-year period, using conservative estimates of fuel costs. Higher efficiency, lower energy costs, greater "up-time," and reduced maintenance costs are the primary drivers of this savings.
Not a B1/B2/Chass-E Frame
As soon as Bollinger rolled out its Chass-E class-3 electric rolling chassis earlier in 2020, prospective commercial customers began inquiring about upfitting delivery van bodywork to it. This could easily be done, of course but it made no sense—unless said deliveries were to be made so far off pavement as to utilize the Chass-E's low-range gearing and portal-axle ground clearance. Instead of lifting deliveries way up and down to off-road pickup floor heights, CEO Robert Bollinger reckoned it made more sense to take the same basic frame extrusions and lower them as much as possible, while reusing as much of the electric technology his company had already engineered and scaling it to cover gross-vehicle weight ratings ranging from Class 2B through Class 5 (8,500-19,500 pounds).
What's Retained?
The basic modular, flat, in-floor battery and its management system, power inverter, front motor and gearbox all carry over. A single motor provides front-wheel drive, so as to keep the rear floor area low and flat between the rear wheels. Built up of longitudinal 35-kWh modules, battery pack choices in the Deliver-E will initially include 70-, 105-, 140-, 175-, and 210 kilowatt-hours of energy, though a 35-kWh unit for use in dense urban areas with particularly short routes is also easily conceivable. The standard model will therefore get 307 horsepower and 334 lb-ft of torque, routed through the same transaxle, though Bollinger presumes a larger motor offering may be needed for the highest-capacity vans. Beyond that, as many B1/B2 subsystems and ancillary items as possible will be utilized.

