Wow, this thread got a lot of replies while I watched the new (3-hour-long...) James Bond movie. Sorry for not paying better attention!
A few points in no particular order:
Price. It seems to cost about the same amount as the normal F-150. The work truck model has four doors, AWD, CarPlay, power windows, automatic A/C, etc. for $32,500 after the tax credit. That seems like a bargain for a new F150. I'm assuming the larger pack will add about $10,000 to the price, making it a $50k truck. Lots of assumptions, but that's all we have until more details come out. And yes, the tax credit is real: My wife bought a Honda Clarity a few years ago, then Uncle Sam sent a $7500 check. Neat!
I don't ask for much in my tow vehicle: Four seats, CarPlay, cruise control, four-wheel-drive and a relatively quiet cabin are my only firm requirements.
Cost of ownership vs. my V10: I put 15,000 miles or so per year on my truck, and it barely moves unless hooked to a trailer. At 8 mpg and $3/gallon, that's $468/month in fuel alone. Add oil changes, shocks, transmission rebuild, etc etc (all the expenses that come with driving around a truck with 200,000 miles), and it's not hard to picture a world where all that is replaced with a truck payment. Charging at home is so close to free it's barely worth doing the math for (I learned that with my last electric car). This isn't relevant to my original question, but if I have a modern F150 with free fuel, do I also need a Honda to daily drive? Or can a Lightning fill both roles and cut more fuel/insurance/maintenance out of my life?
Also, don't forget that my current truck has a resale value, especially these days. That's relevant both to me (I'd sell it and get money) and to our hypothetical truck shopper, as they can't get a V10 for free.
Fuel stop time: Time yourself from exiting the highway to getting on the highway. They take longer than most people think. I don't treat gas stops like NASCAR pit stops; I take my time. But I'm also able to knock down 1100 mile days when I have to because I'm able to pace myself. On shorter drives, this strategy means I'm not exhausted the next day.
I've already learned a fair bit and am slowly filling in the blanks; thanks for the feedback everybody!