Currently reading: Behind the wheel of DHL's new electric milk float

German delivery giant DHL is shaking up the world of milk delivery with its new StreetScooter electric float. We take one for a spin

Ernie, long since felled by one of Two-Tonne Ted of Teddington’s rock cakes, may once have driven the fastest milk cart in the west, but even he would have had difficulty keeping up with Ian Beardwell.

A milkman for 28 years, he has just taken delivery of what must surely be the world’s fastest production milk float: the DHL StreetScooter. Weighing 2600kg fully laden, it has a top speed of 53mph compared with his old, 4500kg Unigate float’s 10mph.

“Those old SEV Cabac floats were so slow,” Ian says when I join him early one morning on his south-west London round. “Uncomfortable, too. You’d end your shift with knackered knees and ankles.” His StreetScooter must feel like a Rolls-Royce in comparison. It’s powerful – there’s a Boost mode for extra grunt – and has light but direct power steering. It’s smooth-riding, crossing speed humps without disturbing the bottles stacked behind, and safe, with a rear-view camera for urban U-turns. In short, it’s transformed Ian’s working life.

He’s a big lad but thanks to his driver-friendly StreetScooter Ian can move like a gazelle, leaping from the driver’s seat (conveniently, the StreetScooter is a left-hooker) to slide open the van’s lightweight side door, grab the next order, hurry to the customer’s front door to make the drop and collect the empties and hop back in. It’s a high-energy routine he repeats 300 times a day (he has 650 customers but not everyone has a daily delivery), starting at one in the morning and finishing at seven. “I’m one very happy milkman,” he says, his eyes shining.

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It’s the little things that excite him. Such as the fact that the StreetScooter’s figure-hugging driver’s seat is heated but the squab has no raised edge on the pavement side, so he can slide in and out easily. Or the way the vehicle locks automatically when he’s more than five metres away from it with the remote fob (there’s no key) in his pocket, and unlocks as he returns. And the way that if he forgets to put the handbrake on, parking pins shoot out automatically to lock the wheels. And the windscreen not only has washer jets but is also heated. “When we had the Beast from the East, temperatures were down to minus 15deg C but my windscreen was clear in a couple of minutes,” he says.

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Behind the scenes at Britain's ice-cream van HQ

He likes, too, that the StreetScooter is near silent. “The old floats made a high-pitched whine that woke dogs up,” he says. “Now I’m in and gone without them knowing.”

Ian’s employer, home delivery company Milk & More, says its new 200-strong fleet of StreetScooters, worth £6.5 million, is the first of its kind in the UK. In time the company plans to replace its remaining diesel- powered vans with the new vehicles, at least on urban rounds. And who would blame them when it’s seen a 90% reduction in operating fuel costs compared with the old oil-burners?

The StreetScooter has a maximum range of 75 miles. Ian reckons that by the time he’s completed his 30-mile round, the battery is reading around 65% charged. Compare that with his old electric float that could barely manage 25 miles before whining to a stop. The StreetScooter’s brake energy regen system helps, of course.

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“It’s got KERS, just like Formula E,” says Ian, a keen racing fan.

The StreetScooter is one of the electric vehicle world’s major success stories. However, it’s made not by a traditional car or commercial vehicle manufacturer but by German delivery giant DHL. The company bought StreetScooter, the Aachen university-founded EV maker, in 2014 and started building bespoke, electrically powered delivery vehicles for its Deutsche Post subsidiary two years later because, it claimed, existing vehicle manufacturers weren’t interested in doing so.

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Today, DP operates more than 6000 StreetScooters throughout Germany. Interest in the model from external operators such as Milk & More has prompted DHL to open a second manufacturing plant with the capacity to take combined annual production to 20,000 vehicles. Such has been the success of StreetScooter that DHL reckons its electric vehicle offshoot will be in profit by 2020.

However, perhaps with an eye on the development spend needed for the next generation of StreetScooters, the company has been making noises about selling off its production arm, or at least inviting partners on board to share costs.

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Happily, all this is of little concern to Ian Beardwell. I joined him well into his round, and despite the StreetScooter’s easy driving manners, he looks like he could use a break, at least from the wheel... I’ve observed him enough to know the drill: foot on brake, stab power button to start, tap lever to Drive, check the way is clear, release the parking brake and off we go.

No wonder he’s a happy milkman. Not only is StreetScooter’s driving position car-like and all controls traditionally and conveniently located, but it also drives with an effortlessness and refinement that is truly amazing. Granted, the milk crates behind the bulkhead sit on a grippy rubber mat to prevent them moving around, but there really is no load noise as the torquey 48kW motor picks up speed on Wimbledon’s roads. Double-tap the drive lever for Boost mode and milk was never delivered faster.

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Given that, at this hour, parked cars still line the area’s narrow streets, I have to drive into impossibly small parking slots to avoid holding up early risers. At 5784mm in length it’s almost as long as a Rolls-Royce Phantom but its relatively short wheelbase means you can easily tuck it out of the way.

“It’s longer and faster,” says Ian, with a milkman’s wink. He’d better watch out for those rock cakes.

John Evans

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Comments
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Clarkey 16 September 2018

I don't see them claiming it

I don't see them claiming it was their idea - I just see them getting on with it while we whine about the past.

jagdavey 16 September 2018

Why has it taken 50 years to prove electric milkfloats were best

Its taken over 50 years only to prove that the original electric milk float was simply a great vehicle for inner cities & short runs.

But again it's another German company that's trying to convince us that it was there idea first.

Slowmo 16 September 2018

I'm Birmingham born and bred

jagdavey wrote:

Its taken over 50 years only to prove that the original electric milk float was simply a great vehicle for inner cities & short runs.

But again it's another German company that's trying to convince us that it was there idea first.

(I'm assuming you're British.) I've seen Rover and Leyland DAF go belly up, and now I get to watch as my fellow Brits run the risk of Jaguar Land Rover going under due to the idiotic pursuit of "taking back control". The privatisation of Royal Mail is a bizarre joke in comparison with the privatisation of Deutsche Post. Our current opposition party, the only party that could possibly change the status quo due to our idiotic FPTP electoral system, seem to think that giving lots more power to our industry destroying unions will somehow save the economy. Against this background of utter embarrassment for my country, I read your impotent unhinged potshot alleging that Germany is trying to convince people the electric milkfloat was their idea first...that's the key thing you took from this piece?

xxxx 17 September 2018

Jaguar Land Rover going under, again?

Slowmo wrote:
jagdavey wrote:

Its taken over 50 years only to prove that the original electric milk float was simply a great vehicle for inner cities & short runs.

But again it's another German company that's trying to convince us that it was there idea first.

(I'm assuming you're British.) I've seen Rover and Leyland DAF go belly up, and now I get to watch as my fellow Brits run the risk of Jaguar Land Rover going under due to the idiotic pursuit of "taking back control". The privatisation of Royal Mail is a bizarre joke in comparison with the privatisation of Deutsche Post. Our current opposition party, the only party that could possibly change the status quo due to our idiotic FPTP electoral system, seem to think that giving lots more power to our industry destroying unions will somehow save the economy. Against this background of utter embarrassment for my country, I read your impotent unhinged potshot alleging that Germany is trying to convince people the electric milkfloat was their idea first...that's the key thing you took from this piece?

I saw Rover and Leyland DAF go belly up too, was that due to BREXIT?

" idiotic FPTP electoral system" :- you lost that people's vote too 

Slowmo 17 September 2018

Nothing to do with Brexit

Where did I say Brexit had anything to do with Rover or LDV? I was replying to an irrational comment that blamed Germany for stealing the electric milkfloat idea, when, in my opinion, the UK should focus on improving its own vehicle industry (something I think will not be helped by Brexit or the current opposition getting in to power).

From a historical Rover/LDV perspective, we're perfectly capable of decimating our car industry even with JIT supply chains enabled by frictionless trade at the borders.

I see the warm feeling you get from from your referendum "wins" allows you to happily block out the warnings from JLR (don't forget the iPace is being built in Slovakia) and the fact that the German postal service appears to be better at manufacturing vehicles than the British owned motor industry.

The most important this is that you keep winning though, so well done.

xxxx 17 September 2018

When

Slowmo wrote:

Where did I say Brexit had anything to do with Rover or LDV?....

When you included the famous line " idiotic pursuit of "taking back control"".

Slowmo 17 September 2018

Read the sentence again

xxxx wrote:

Slowmo wrote:

Where did I say Brexit had anything to do with Rover or LDV?....

When you included the famous line " idiotic pursuit of "taking back control"".

You appear to find it difficult to understand sentences that include commas. Brexit poses a risk to JLR. Brexit does not pose a risk to Rover or LDV because both of those companies went belly up years ago. I raised these concepts in respect of an article about a vehicle company owned by Deutsche Post and an irrational below-the-line comment from somebody complaining that Germany was somehow passing of the electric milkfloat as their own idea. I responded with some broader opinions about the past, present and future state of British owned vehicle manufacturers. These concepts are not complicated.

Slowmo 17 September 2018

Nothing to do with Brexit

Where did I say Brexit had anything to do with Rover or LDV? I was replying to an irrational comment that blamed Germany for stealing the electric milkfloat idea, when, in my opinion, the UK should focus on improving its own vehicle industry (something I think will not be helped by Brexit or the current opposition getting in to power).

From a historical Rover/LDV perspective, we're perfectly capable of decimating our car industry even with JIT supply chains enabled by frictionless trade at the borders.

I see the warm feeling you get from from your referendum "wins" allows you to happily block out the warnings from JLR (don't forget the iPace is being built in Slovakia) and the fact that the German postal service appears to be better at manufacturing vehicles than the British owned motor industry.

The most important this is that you keep winning though, so well done.

jagdavey 16 September 2018

Why has it taken 50 years to prove electric milkfloats were best

Its taken over 50 years only to prove that the original electric milk float was simply a great vehicle for inner cities & short runs.

But again it's another German company that's trying to convince us that it was there idea first.

Cé hé sin 16 September 2018

jagdavey wrote:

jagdavey wrote:

....But again it's another German company that's trying to convince us that it was there idea first.

Where did you read in the article that they were trying to convince us of anything of the sort? I certainly can't see it anywhere.