Nick Mayer GMC of Lewisburg is flooding the roads of Southern Middle Tennessee with massive all-electric machines this July 2026. Drivers in Columbia and Shelbyville can now buy giant, battery-powered trucks that silently hum down the highway. The dealership is offering a rapidly growing lineup of Chevrolet and GMC electric vehicles, making clean driving highly accessible to local buyers.
On these back roads, charging is the only thing that actually matters to truck buyers. General Motors recently opened up access to over 15,000 Tesla Superchargers for its electric vehicle owners. This means your new Chevy Blazer EV will not leave you stranded near a Fayetteville cow pasture looking for an outlet.
The Heavyweight Hardware Landing in Tennessee Showrooms
Look at the sheer scale of the GMC Hummer EV sitting on the Lewisburg lot. This absolute brick of a vehicle weighs over 9,000 pounds, which is roughly the weight of three average adult rhinos. It uses General Motors' Ultium platform, a modular battery setup that stacks cells vertically or horizontally depending on how much room you need to clear a ditch.
Under its hood lies a front trunk—or frunk—that holds more gear than the back of some small sedans. For the more sensible folks in Pulaski, the Chevrolet Silverado EV is the real workhorse. With an EPA-estimated range of up to 450 miles on some work truck trims, you can drive back and forth across the state line three times without sweating.
How Silent Electric Power Shakes Up Southern Roads
While roaring V8 engines have long been the local soundtrack in the heart of Southern Middle Tennessee, this new class of vehicles changes how drivers interact with the road. Because these new trucks use regenerative braking, drivers barely touch the brake pedal at all. The electric motor acts as a generator to slow the vehicle down when you lift your foot off the gas pedal. This clever trick feeds power back into the battery pack and saves your brake pads from wearing out over time.
Why Your Battery Thinks in Modules and Why It Matters
Managing the massive amount of energy required for these tasks requires sophisticated thermal management, especially during a humid Tennessee July. To prevent overheating, General Motors uses liquid cooling channels that run directly underneath the battery pouches in their modular setup. This smart plumbing keeps the cells at the exact temperature needed to fast-charge at 350 kilowatts without any issues.
From a personal view, the coolest trick is how these trucks switch their internal voltage on the fly. When you plug a GMC Sierra EV into a high-speed charger, the battery pack magically splits its 800-volt system into two 400-volt halves to suck up electricity faster. According to technical reports from the Society of Automotive Engineers, this clever trick cuts charging times in half, proving that math can actually be useful.
The Unseen Financial Realities of Electric Truck Ownership
Before you rush to the Lewisburg showroom, you need to understand the weird state rules on electric driving. Tennessee charges a yearly electric vehicle registration fee of $200, which is scheduled to climb even higher to offset lost gas taxes. But you can easily dodge this pain because federal clean vehicle tax credits of up to $7,500 can be applied directly at the dealership counter to slash your initial purchase price.
By plugging your Chevy Equinox EV in after midnight, you pay pennies on the dollar compared to filling up a standard gas tank. Local utility companies in Columbia are offering special off-peak charging rates to make home charging ridiculously cheap. It is an absolute win for anyone who dislikes giving their hard-earned money to big oil companies.