The GM EV1 had an estimated MSRP of $34k and a range 70-100 miles.
Hybrids like the Prius and Insight that cost around $20k and get around 50mpg are flying off the shelves
I'd find it great if there where more electric vehicles on the road, but i wouldn't buy one
Gregg Bolinger wrote:And just look at the fact that GM wouldn't even let the existing leasers buy out their lease and keep the car. I think their is more to it than just it not be economically viable.
GM has potential legal obligations under laws that require automakers to maintain parts and service infrastructure for consumer vehicles for a period of no less than 15 years.
Gregg Bolinger wrote: these cars were on the road using ZERO gas emitting ZERO pollution making nearly no sound, and their drivers were happy.
Gregg Bolinger wrote:
So I'm not sure it is fair to say that their success has anything to do with the death of the EV1. And I fail to see how it debunks the video.
Gregg Bolinger wrote:However, in the states, diesel costs more than gas.
Chris Baron wrote:
Gregg Bolinger wrote:However, in the states, diesel costs more than gas.
Hmm, this sounds more like a conspiracy than the death of the electric car.
Normal fuel is much more costly to refine than diesel.
Do you have a higher tax on it in the states?
Joe Ess wrote:Hybrids like the Prius and Insight that cost around $20k and get around 50mpg are flying off the shelves
Pat Farrell wrote: Toyota and Honda could be buying some good will by selling the hybrids below cost.
Joe Ess wrote:Both are supposedly profitable.
Pat Farrell wrote:So was Enron. I don't trust stores where these is serious pressure to make something that is good seem like good business.
Joe Ess wrote:
Pat Farrell wrote:their success in the market points to flaws in the arguments made in the film.
Can you mention of few?
Joe Ess wrote: And even if they were dumping hybrids on the market (something that regulators would probably raise the red flag on).
Joe Ess wrote:it doesn't change the whole reason why I brought up hybrids in the first place: their success in the market points to flaws in the arguments made in the film.
Pat Farrell wrote:Read what I'm writing carefully
Joe Ess wrote:The movie posits that there are entrenched interests (big oil, big auto, the government) who want new technology like electric cars to fail in order to protect their influence and profit. I submit that the success of the Prius and the Insight, fuel efficient cars that would piss off big oil made by foreign manufacturers that would piss off big auto using an technology (hybrid drive) that was not what the US government wanted (hydrogen), contradicts the film's assertion.
Gregg Bolinger wrote:I'd also like to note that the first round of hybrids were all made by non-US auto companies (Honda and Toyota). Ford was the first US company to release a hybrid and guess what, it was an SUV.
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Paul Clapham wrote:you'll find that SUV's are worst-performing in terms of gas mileage. So improving them first is the right thing to do.
"$35K doesn't seem that much to me considering the technology at the time"
Henry Carver wrote:
"$35K doesn't seem that much to me considering the technology at the time"
You must be making a lot more than I do. 70 to 100 miles may be practical for some people but looking at the highway with thousands of people driving up to 30 miles into the city sitting in traffic, I think that isn't nearly enough. And my cell phone is dead because I forgot to charge it last night. I can live without my cell phone. It would be hard to get to work without a car.
I don't see any advantage of an SUV over a minivan, unless you're camping in the wilderness.Pat Farrell wrote:
Paul Clapham wrote:you'll find that SUV's are worst-performing in terms of gas mileage. So improving them first is the right thing to do.
Depends on how you use them. For one guy and a briefcase, yes, they are terrible. But to take five engineers out to a building site, with gear, they are very efficient.
Frank Silbermann wrote:I don't see any advantage of an SUV over a minivan, unless you're camping in the wilderness.
So the rejection of minivans in favor of SUVs is sexist! Minivans are associated with children, and being with children is considered "women's work."Pat Farrell wrote:
Frank Silbermann wrote:I don't see any advantage of an SUV over a minivan, unless you're camping in the wilderness.
Minivans are driven by moms. SUVs are driven by real men.
Actually, something like a Suburban has a lot more room for people and stuff than a minivan.
Pat Farrell wrote:... the CAFE standard outlawed station wagons
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Frank Silbermann wrote:So the rejection of minivans in favor of SUVs is sexist!
Andrew Monkhouse wrote:People keep bringing up the fact that there is a limitation on how far you can drive a battery operated car on a single charge.
Andrew Monkhouse wrote:Really? So it is illegal to sell the 2009 Mercedes-Benz E Class Wagon or the 2010 Subaru Legacy Sport Station Wagon in America? How bizarre.
"I don't understand the sitting in traffic logic. If it's 30 miles to work it doesn't matter how long you sit in traffic."
"People keep bringing up the fact that there is a limitation on how far you can drive a battery operated car on a single charge. However there is a limitation to how far you can drive a gasoline powered car on a single tank of gas as well."
Gregg Bolinger wrote:Interesting that we should care about the disposal of batteries in electric cars but we don't think twice about all the other electronics we own and their batteries.
I see a few problems with the swap-battery approach:Andrew Monkhouse wrote:People keep bringing up the fact that there is a limitation on how far you can drive a battery operated car on a single charge. However there is a limitation to how far you can drive a gasoline powered car on a single tank of gas as well. While battery powered cars may not currently have the range of fossil fuel cars, that may change. Just think of the improvements in cell phone batteries over the last 20 years as an example.
It is also short sighted to claim that battery operated cars are limited by how far they can travel from home base, or that the driver would have to cart a charger around. This is not a limitation - this is an opportunity for entrepreneurs. We are already seeing companies looking at setting up locations where you can pull up in your battery powered car and swap your batteries for fully charged ones. So no different than refueling really. These are being looked at in China, Israel, Denmark, San Fransisco and Australia. The article on the proposal for Australia is interesting in that it talks about a complete system whereby you can recharge at home and near the office or you can swap batteries if neither option suits your needs for a particular trip. It is also interesting to note that the petroleum companies are looking at how they can move into this potential market instead of trying to pretend it doesn't exist or attempt to kill it off.
Frank Silbermann wrote: The petroleum-based transportation system was so harmful even before China and India began their economic development.
Let's see. The cars were not frequently slowing down and speeding up, so the Prius' hybrid system had no braking energy to recapture (which would have been wasted by the BMW).Chris Baron wrote:Jeremy Clarkson, unconventional as always, shows that a BMW M3 can be more economical than a Toyota Prius.
Frank Silbermann wrote:Perhaps we need automatic breaking systems that mimic the braking of the car in front so we can safely tailgate nearly bumper-to-bumper at high speeds.
Frank Silbermann wrote:
Let's see. The cars were not frequently slowing down and speeding up, so the Prius' hybrid system had no braking energy to recapture (which would have been wasted by the BMW).Chris Baron wrote:Jeremy Clarkson...
The Prius was going as fast as possible, and therefore its engine was spinning at a high RPM, which is inefficient. The BMW, designed to travel much faster and therefore having a higher top gear -- drove at a much lower RPM at that speed.
The Prius was traveling in front, at high speed, so it had to plow through a great deal of wind resistance. The BMW followed closely behind, benefiting from the draft behind the Prius.
The only lesson is not to drive a Prius for long, steady driving at top speed. And whatever you're driving on the highway, try to follow a large truck as closely as is safe. (Perhaps we need automatic breaking systems that mimic the braking of the car in front so we can safely tailgate nearly bumper-to-bumper at high speeds.)
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I don't think _either_ car got good mileage in that test. All it proved is that you can drive in such a way to get lousy mileage even with a Prius.Chris Baron wrote:
Frank Silbermann wrote:
Let's see. The cars were not frequently slowing down and speeding up, so the Prius' hybrid system had no braking energy to recapture (which would have been wasted by the BMW).Chris Baron wrote:Jeremy Clarkson...
The Prius was going as fast as possible, and therefore its engine was spinning at a high RPM, which is inefficient. The BMW, designed to travel much faster and therefore having a higher top gear -- drove at a much lower RPM at that speed.
The Prius was traveling in front, at high speed, so it had to plow through a great deal of wind resistance. The BMW followed closely behind, benefiting from the draft behind the Prius.
The only lesson is not to drive a Prius for long, steady driving at top speed. And whatever you're driving on the highway, try to follow a large truck as closely as is safe. (Perhaps we need automatic breaking systems that mimic the braking of the car in front so we can safely tailgate nearly bumper-to-bumper at high speeds.)
You are right and it's known that Clarkson hates the Prius. But it was fair that he didn't compare it to a a normal car, say a Ford Focus or a Vauxhall/Opel Astra with a diesel motor, but such racer like the M3. And he points out at the end of the video why he made this comparison: you can get good mpg with a normal car too.