Engineering Explained has a few videos about charge times that clear this up quite a bit. You can easily keep your charge times to 20 to 40 minute stops as long as you are using a Tesla or Electrify America charging stations. The key is not to wait for the vehicle to get to 100% charge, but leave around 80%. The fuller your battery is, the slower it charges. In summary, it isn't near as bad as most people think, but probably longer than ICE.Ford would surely wait to see how quickly the Lightning gets accepted by customers before making such a big change. I would guess that they go with a hybrid model first though, as that would you wouldn't have the same range issue.
There are quite a few issues I'd want to see fixed or improved before I make that sort of investment. Range isn't so much the issue, but the charging times. It's fine 95% of the time, but if I decide I want to drive to Florida for example, I don't want to have to have the trip take twice as long because of charging, and then have to make plans to charge while I'm there. I probably would end up just renting a vehicle to avoid the hassle.
The other big issue is depreciation. Your batteries will hold less charge the older they are, and thus you'll get worse performance and lower resale value (I would think, haven't looked at used values). They need to find a way to keep battery capacity high or economically be able to switch out batteries.
How Miserable Is A Tesla Road Trip?
How Miserable Is A Winter Tesla Road Trip? -18°C & Broken Superchargers
Can An Electric Car Travel 1,000 Miles In A Day?
Really interesting, real world experiments. I think the winter one is most interesting as he has had the car for a while whereas the first one is his first road trip in the car so he hadn't figured out how to optimize stops.