"I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them."
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."
-- Thomas Jefferson: American Founding Father, clairvoyant and seditious traitor.
Hybrids are a mere stop-gap measure in terms of future automotive technologies anyway, until Hydrogen fuel-cell technology is brought to the mass-market.
And a bandwagon stop-gap at that, dim peope who don't look past the hype buy one for being green and nothing else. They aren't nearly as efficient as the hype, are very, very expensive, are dull and slow to drive, and are not particularly 'green' anyway - the huge batteries use various valuable metals which are in short supply - increasingly lithium - and are not recyclable, so mainly go to landfill.
Anyone who gives a hoot about environmentalism and needs a car need look no further than a small diesel hatchback, which nowadays give invariably better mileage, lower emissions, cost half as much to buy, are far simpler and therefore break down less, and drive far better than any hybrid.
Hybrid. Blah. Bring on the fuel-cell.
Full hybrid buses are an improvement though![]()
Keep on keepin' the beat alive!
Maybe.
Not as much an improvement as fuel-cell buses though, already in use in Hamburg, London, Barcelona, Stockholm, Porto, Stuttgart, Amsterdam, Luxembourg, Madrid, Iceland, and Western Australia ... spearheaded by Mercedes.
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I remember seeing a Top Gear episode where Captain Slow went to Cali to see a Honda Insight (if i remember correctly) using Fuel Cell tech, very impressive.
Like the 2.2 i-CTDi Honda Civic Type SAnyone who gives a hoot about environmentalism and needs a car need look no further than a small diesel hatchback.....
Road Tax is excellent, especially when compared to my Puma and the 55mpg (i know it's not going to be exactly that) is rather attractive. Plus the styling inside is the fucking titties. My inner geek would be happy.
Apparently, the insurer State Farm is demanding that all accident/damage claims they paid for Toyotas and acceleration problems be rescinded. They want their money back. Not sure how far back in time they're going, but this could cost them Billions if other insurers follow suit.
Moving forward, assuming this mess doesn't bankrupt Toyota, I wonder if insurers will charge more for owners with Toyotas, or refuse to insure them altogether.
edit to add:
http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2010...-is-unsafe/?hp
When it rains, it pours....Consumer Reports Says Lexus GX 460 Is Unsafe
Last edited by GGT; 04-13-2010 at 02:58 PM.