TylerDurden said:Hey fucktards,
keep your politcal rants in the cesspool.
....and you keep that kinda language in the cesspool
TylerDurden said:Hey fucktards,
keep your politcal rants in the cesspool.
Yep. Nep.neptronix said:TylerDurden said:Hey fucktards,
keep your politcal rants in the cesspool.
....and you keep that kinda language in the cesspool![]()
Punx0r said:I haven't made a serious study of it, but the arguments bandied about are believable. It's a reasonably-sized, reasonably heavy car with a bunch of extra electronics and a load of nickel. It's got to be more polluting/energy intensive to produce than your average car. It's also not that good on fuel when compared to some purely ICE cars.
To me it always seemed like a half-baked EV. I understand the restrictions on large-format nimh cells put a huge limitation on any/most EV's.
TylerDurden said:I will buy LED bulbs now, knowing they will be surpassed in lumens/$ next year; but if nobody buys them now, manufacturers have less incentive to push the tech. At least I won't have to buy bulbs again, in this life.
texaspyro said:Toyota sells a non-hybrid version outside the US that gets better mileage than the Prius.
texaspyro said:The Prius (and pretty much all hybrids) is a scam. Toyota sells a non-hybrid version outside the US that gets better mileage than the Prius.
..in the interests af accuracy..neptronix said:. The battery in the Prius is only about 90 pounds. The Lead Acid battery in an ordinary car is going to be in the 50-70lb range. :lol:
Hillhater said:..in the interests af accuracy..neptronix said:. The battery in the Prius is only about 90 pounds. The Lead Acid battery in an ordinary car is going to be in the 50-70lb range. :lol:
Few regular 12 car batteries weigh more than 30lbs...certainly not in the small/ compact car division.
..and i suspect that 90lbs for the Prius is only the cell weight without all the packaging.
Early Prius packs were much heavier also.
Is it smart to believe that gas is going to remain at $3.57 or even close over the next 11 years?TylerDurden said:
DETROIT – At 118 miles per gallon, the Honda Fit electric vehicle is the most fuel-efficient in the United States. But getting that mileage isn't cheap — and it isn't always good for the environment.....
The electric Fit has an estimated price tag nearly twice as high as the gasoline-powered version. It would take 11 years before a driver makes up the difference and begins saving on fuel....
That's because the numbers don't add up for the average consumer.
• The electric Fit needs 28.6 kilowatt hours of electricity to go 100 miles. At the national average price of 11.6 cents per kilowatt hour, that costs $3.30.
A gas-powered automatic-transmission Fit, which gets 31 miles per gallon, needs to burn 3.2 gallons to travel 100 miles. At the national average price of $3.57 per gallon of gasoline, that's $11.52.
• People drive an average of almost 13,500 miles a year, so a typical driver would spend $445 on electricity for an electric Fit over a year, and $1,552 on gasoline for a regular Fit.
• Honda has valued the price of an electric Fit at $29,125 after a $7,500 federal tax credit. That's $12,210 more than the gas-powered Fit — a savings of $1,107 per year to make up the difference between the electric and the gas-powered version.
"People are smart. They're looking for the deal," he said. "Is somebody going to fork out $15,000 more for something that gets them less range than their car now? It's not happening."
Hey, I used to have a 3 cylinder geo metro xfi in the 1993 when gas was cheap, but I used to drive over 180 miles to and fro with it with no air conditioning in the 105 degree heat...loved it!Hey, we also got the Geo Metro for a moment.. that car was received much like a wet turd in a blanket... why? .. dinky.. low power.. rattly..![]()
MitchJi said:Is it smart to believe that gas is going to remain at $3.57 or even close over the next 11 years?
TylerDurden said:MitchJi said:Is it smart to believe that gas is going to remain at $3.57 or even close over the next 11 years?
[youtube]BLH1C4N35o0[/youtube]Do $6-a-gallon gas and electric vehicles go hand in hand?
Well, it may be a stretch to conclude that from a two-minute fifty-second man-on-the-street video posted by Honda, but it may not be far off.
Honda said it polled 1,000 Americans about their attitudes towards both buying more fuel-efficient vehicles and potential advanced powertrains and interviewed a handful of men and women to see if their views were consistent with the larger poll.
The Japanese automaker found that, while 30 percent of respondents would actively seek out a more fuel-efficient car if gas hit $5 a gallon, 62 percent would do the same if gas hit $6 a gallon. Meanwhile, 15 percent said nothing would make them consider a fuel sipper.
Additionally, 37 percent of those polled said electricity would be the primary source of vehicle power 20 years from now, while 19 percent said gasoline would still reign supreme by then and another 19 percent saw biofuels as the fuel of the future. We know that just because people think something is true doesn't make that thing come true, but 37 percent market share in 2032 would be something, wouldn't it? See Honda's video below.
In Europe and Asia, they mainly sell lower power, smaller cars.Hillhater said:texaspyro said:Toyota sells a non-hybrid version outside the US that gets better mileage than the Prius.
??? I thought the Prius is a unique model..please link to the non hybrid version.
..unless you are referring to a plug in ev rather than an ICE ??
There are many cars that get better mileage than the Prius..in certain conditions,..but few that can match it in urban use.
Not if another economy crash will happen (which it tends to look like that).TylerDurden said:If I'm reading the chart properly, the price of gas in the US doubles in four years. It got knocked back by the GFC in '08... but, low and behold: $4/gal is mostly back.
If the trend persists, $6/gal in the US is two years away.
So a gas powered Fit sees $6 * 3.2 = $19.20/100mi x135 = $2,592/yr.
Subtract $445 and save $2,147/yr driving the Fit EV.
Divide $12,210 by 2147 and find 5.68 years of savings pays for the difference in price.
Well, I'm not sure the price of US gas will hit $6/gal in two years, but I can easily see it average $6/gal over the next 5.7 yrs.
What about the chevy volt?Arlo1 said:The MPG rating for an electric is very Stupid. KWH/mile or KM is the only proper way to rate a EV. Everyone pays different prices for electricity and what about those who don't pay anything?
ProDigit said:In Europe and Asia, they mainly sell lower power, smaller cars.
The Toyota Yaris is sold in Belgium and the Netherlands with an MPG rating (after conversion) of ~47MPG avg.
In Japan, cars are even more efficient than this.
They're equipped with a 65-90HP, 1-1.4L instead of the 1.5L 106HP from USA. Also their body work is lighter, and the car is smaller.
They even sell a Yaris Hybrid there!
Yaris isn't the only one, there are plenty more cars in Europe using way less fuel than the yaris; and that's not even including the DIESEL cars, which use on average 1,2 to 1,5x less fuel.
But if you ask me, they're not enjoyable, largely underpowered cars; and way less safe!
neptronix said:You need to study it a bit more. The battery in the Prius is only about 90 pounds. The Lead Acid battery in an ordinary car is going to be in the 50-70lb range.
In ordinary driving, the prius emits about 1/5th of what the hummer would, and uses less than half the gasoline. Over the lifetime of the vehicle, do you really think that producing a recycleable 90 pound battery is gonna produce so much emissions that it makes the hummer greener?
Please don't let me down. I want to believe i'm in a community full of intelligent people. Do some research and see if you still believe that FUD put out there by the oil industry :lol:
TylerDurden said: