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How much gasoline do you use? |
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| Feb26-12, 11:47 PM | #35 |
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How much gasoline do you use?
As a single suburbanite with a 2002 Honda Accord, I used about $1000 of gasoline last year.
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| Feb27-12, 12:06 AM | #36 |
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| Feb27-12, 12:41 AM | #37 |
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A few years ago I discovered that the Honda Civic Diesel sold in Europe gets better mileage than the Honda Civic Hybrid [not a plug-in]. Plug-in hybrids may make good sense for local driving, but your any distance, diesel is the way to go. And the efforts to produce carbon-neutral biodiesel from souces like algae and bacteria, look most promising. There may already be diesel hybrids our there. I know Ford was working on one. When it comes to efficiency, diesel is quite simply superior to internal combustion engines. I know there are variations on the classic ICE that seem to promise higher efficiencies, but diesel is a more-than-proven technology. |
| Feb27-12, 02:51 AM | #38 |
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My regular commute is approx 2 miles urban, 18 miles motorway, 2 more miles urban. I know the route backwards (obviously I know it backwards
.... I meant it figuratively!), and I know how to drive it so that the car naturally slows at every point I might get stopped, and brake only a remaining 5mph, maybe, if I do need to stop. Net result is that a hybrid would serve absolutely zero purpose in this scenario - the extra motor/batteries would just be dead weight. Their only purpose is to regenerate under braking. So by not having a hybrid but driving so you don't need to brake, you'd avoid all that harmful* CO2 that would then float off into the atmosphere in the manufacture of those extra, useless bits. *(Not my opinion - quoting the EPA's ruling on CO2 emissions.) I used to have a car with the VAG 1896 diesel engine with variable turbo geometry. VW claimed 43% thermal efficiency from it (and they've made more efficient engines since then!). I used to average 85 mpg on the same route (cold-start to key-off), if I kept my speed under 55mph on the motorway. And this wasn't a teeny car, this was a full 3500lbs mid-sized family car. This makes even a plug in hybrid pointless, from a CO2 emissions standpoint, as it would be more efficient to burn that fossil fuel in the car than in the power station (assuming this sort of efficiency, and non-nuclear/renewable electricity). |
| Feb27-12, 08:36 AM | #39 |
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I don't think my brain to foot neurons would allow me to go so slowly. |
| Feb27-12, 08:49 AM | #40 |
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| Feb27-12, 09:07 AM | #41 |
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In the Škoda range there is now a range of even more economical cars, like Bluemotion but named 'Greenline'. The smaller car in the range, the 2,500lbs Fabia, comes with a homologated highway figure of 95mpg. |
| Feb27-12, 09:25 AM | #42 |
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| Feb27-12, 09:46 AM | #43 |
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Getting tricky to justify at 400miles a week though. I'm looking for a decent diesel, Leon Ecomotive. Don't think I could give up the power though. |
| Feb27-12, 10:50 AM | #44 |
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| Feb27-12, 11:02 PM | #45 |
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Dont use gasoline, but it costs me about 100- 150$ a week in diesel at a minimum, so atleast 5200- 7700$ a year, but I am sure it is usually over that since I usually average 30,000 miles a year at 20 mpg at @ 4$ a gallon, and most years I am closer to 50,000 miles. Traveling is my entertainment, as well as necessary for most my jobs, a road I have never before been down is one that I just have to travel down and 'short cuts' are my favorite, though I have yet to find a 'short cut' that wasnt longer than the normal route. :)
As a side note, I never pay much attention to fuel prices or my mileage. Imo, it is just the cost neccesary to my way of life, especially living in the west where the next major town is 80 miles away in every direction, and I can spend days in the great basin without seeing a town let alone another person, although alot of the year 4x4 is neccesary, which also lowers my mpg, but makes traveling far more interesting. |
| Mar10-12, 12:02 AM | #46 |
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I mean sure, a bicycle gets better gas mileage than a Lamborghini Aventador Coupe. But if you had a magic, unlimited energy Lamborghini Aventador Coupe that costs $3000 more (all else being equal as the normal, gas one), you wouldn't compare it to a bicycle. You'd compare it against a normal Lamborghini Aventador Coupe. The problem is my car doesn't have a gas-only equivalent. The Chevy Cruze is roughly the same size and shape as my car, but much lower torque and a reduced feature set. It's not even in the same leauge (not to mention the Cruze has inexpensive wheels with hubcaps, versus the Volt's 17" alloy rims). That's not a fair comparison. "To be fair," I need to compare it to a car with similar features. So here's what I have. My car model: 2012 Chevrolet Volt Width: 70.4 in. Height: 56.6 in. Length: 177.1 in. Front head room: 37.8 in. Front leg room: 42.1 in. Front shoulder room: 56.5 in. Rear head room: 36.0 in. Rear leg room: 34.1 in. Rear shoulder room: 53.9 in. Torque: 273 lb·ft MSRP from $39,145 ![]() Mine's a different color, but you get the idea. ============================================== The Volt is roughly the same size and interior as this model: 2012 Mercedes-Benz C-Class C250 Sport Sedan (and they both ride smoothly). Width: 69.7 in. Height: 56.3 in. Length: 180.8 in. Front head room: 37.1 in. Front leg room: 41.7 in. Front shoulder room: 54.7 in. Rear head room: 36.9 in. Rear leg room: 33.4 in. Rear shoulder room: 55.0 in. EPA mileage est. (cty/hwy): 21/31 mpg MSRP from $34,800 ![]() Of course the Volt only seats 4 and the Benz seats 5. But I can't decide whether that's necessarily a negative. The Volt's back seats are like bucket seats which are much more comfortable anyway. Heck, what am I saying; who needs back seats in the first place? What I'm more interested in is torque! ============================================== The Chevy Volt has the same torque as this model: 2012 Porsche Boxster Convertible Torque: 273 lb·ft EPA mileage est. (cty/hwy): 19/26 mpg MSRP from $65,200 ![]() But a car like that can be pretty loud while driving, making it tough to listen to music or have a pleasant conversation. It's often nice to have a quiet ride. =============================================== The Chevrolet Volt is at least as quiet as this model: 2011 Rolls-Royce Ghost Sedan EPA mileage est. (cty/hwy): 13/20 mpg MSRP from $246,500 ![]() =============================================== Notice I didn't mention horsepower. My Volt's maximum speed is 100 mph as it is, and I have no desire to go that that fast or faster (I live in a modestly congested city -- there's always traffic. The only cars moving 100+ mph are the ones falling off an overpass). Horsepower has more to do with max speed than acceleration. What I'm interested in is instant, quick acceleration at surface street speeds; and that is where torque dominates. So what do you think: When calculating my car's "increased price paid," should I perform a simple average on the MSRPs and EPA mileages of these other models, or should I do a weighted average based on my personal feature preferences? [Edit: sources for all specifications above are from edmunds.com] |
| Mar10-12, 10:26 AM | #47 |
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About the same size as the 83mpg Golf 105bhp 1.6 diesel Bluemotion. The torque is a bit meaningless as it all depends on the gearing as to what torque you actually see at the wheel.
So the question now, then, is if the Golf emits less than 99g of CO2 per km travelled, then if you use the national average mix of electricity then how much CO2 is emitted in generating that much electricity to make the Volta go a kilometer? |
| Mar10-12, 10:48 AM | #48 |
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Just checking the prices of the Golf versus Volt.
In UK you can get the Golf for £17,517 In 2012, you'll be able to get the Ampera for £38.995 So that's a £21,478 difference. The best interest on your money at the moment here is ~4% (Halifax), so you'd get £860 pa just on the interest of the price difference, which, even at UK's exorbitant diesel price of £6.40 per gallon, will provide you with 134 gallons of diesel a year, just funded on the interest alone of the difference, which'd be fuel enough for the Bluemotion Golf of around 10,000 miles. I think the Volt/Ampera is great, but at the moment I'd buy the Golf and pocket the purchase difference. EDIT: Just done the following table comparing it with the Golf's sister, the Skoda Octavia (which is slightly bigger and matches the Volt better). I also picked the vRS model to give you better performance than the Volt. I used your data, and added a few extra lines: ![]()
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| Mar10-12, 05:00 PM | #49 |
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Last year I put 4800 mi on my newer honda at 30mpg or so, and 500 mi on an older car that gets around 20mpg. That's about 185 gallons used, at an average of around $4 per gallon here, so that's around 740 dollars annually for me, a single individual. Granted, I travel every day to class by bike. I started that about mid last year, so really for me alone I should be close to a grand a year if I drove everywhere.
So far this year I have only put 700 miles on the honda at 30mpg (which is now sold), and about 400 on the older car at 20mpg, so that's about 173 dollars since Jan 1. I have really upped the distance that I bike though. If I need to go anywhere and it doesn't matter if I smell nice or not, and I think I can make it, I will bike. I went from doing 5-8 miles each outing for exercise 6 months ago to around 20-30 miles twice a week, not counting my short 1-2 mile trip to the campus 5 days a week. In 2009 I had a little sports car that did no better than 13 mpg, and around 11 on avg. I put 7000 miles on that car that year due to frequent trips upstate. That cost me around 2500 bucks if gas was 4/gal then, but that was also during the great gas-price-panic summer when prices hit 5.50 here. Shocking really. Here's a thread from last year where I contemplated purchasing a road bike for campus-travel. http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=529533 Bike has already paid for itself 5 times over. Best purchase I have made in the past 5 years for sure. |
| Mar10-12, 06:19 PM | #50 |
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