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  1. Hybrid cars are not intended to save fuel, and do so poorly. They are intended to reduce emissions. The reason they exist is that auto makers are required to reduce their overall emissions and to provide some zero emissions vehicle by law. In order to continue producing luxury trucks with inefficient pushrod V-8 engines, they must produce a token amount of the hybrids, on which they lose money. When you purchase one you are personally producing less pollution as you drive, but the overall problem is not solved, nor are these vehicles a solution of any kind to the problem of the car.

  2. Biodiesel requires more petroleum to produce than ordinary petroleum-based fuels, according to recent studies. This is because industrial agriculture in the United States requires so much energy, from the nitrogen fixation to the machinery used, that the fuel oil produced from crops is basically inefficiently converted oil. Biodiesel is a great idea if you already have a source of free biomass around, and it is a great idea for a small number of vehicles that can live off the waste biomass others discard. The overall problem is not solved, nor are these vehicles a solution of any kind to the problem of the car.

  3. Ethanol and ethanol-gasoline mixes do not reduce the U.S. dependence on foreign oil. Ethanol is made almost entirely from corn. The corn is indeed domestically grown in huge quantities and not imported. However, the corn yields depend absolutely on high-powered artificial fertilizers which require so much energy to produce that they are basically congealed electricity. Unless the plants that produce these fertilizers are somehow powered by some unknown renewable or domestic energy source, this country is still absolutely dependent on oil to make the fertilizer so that the corn can be grown and converted into ethanol. When there is a surplus of corn and a temporary shortage of petroleum, ethanol is a fine idea, because it reduces the consumption of gasoline in the short term. The overall problem is not solved, nor are ethanol-based fuels a solution of any kind to the problem of the car.

  4. Great strides have been made in improving the passenger car. If the current technology was appropriately used to its maximum, pollution and fuel consumption from cars could be reduced tremendously. However, almost everything in this country is distributed by truck. It would be difficult to change this, because the country is very spread out. Commercial trucks predominantly use older diesel engines which are inefficient and dirty. Even if every new truck sold was required to be much, much more efficient and clean, the current trucks would be on the road for a long time. Trucks are rarely replaced; they are repaired. It's very expensive to replace them. Any large-scale change in the trucking industry would require a tremendous amount of government subsidy to compensate the small companies and individual contractors who own these trucks, because they can't afford to upgrade. A sharp increase in the cost of trucking would be felt throughout the entire company. There is currently no good solution to the problem of the truck.
Have a nice auto-doom!
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From Autoweek's classifieds:

what

36k Mi, 3.2 Carrera (20k mi) professionally installed. Specialty trans. Cross-drilled discs, 16" Fuchs whls, New Michelins, $22K/bo. Contact: (401)294-9660 (RI) Steve daytime
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My father was a true Southern California, born in Pasadena in 1921. Like everyone else he was car-crazy. Later in life after living in Europe he became crazy for tiny little European sports cars.

He made this list for a piece he wrote in the Los Angeles Times late in life in which he talked about the cars he'd owned. He was astonished at how many there were, and especially at how many enjoyable sports cars he had as a graduate student. I personally got to drive the '67 MG (he says it's a '68 which I think is a mistake), which was a delight; he didn't get rid of it until the 1980s sometime. The 1990 Volvo my mother still has. I inherited both T-Birds in series.

The Fiat station wagon famously died by dumping its engine on Irvine Avenue with a uniquely Italian flair. I wish he'd kept any of the cars before that. Wow, what a list! The Renaults were, of course, purchased in France and all the Italian cars when he was living in Italy.
  1. '30 Ford Model A phaeton

  2. '30 Ford Model A 2-door touring car

  3. '36 Ford V-8 coupé

  4. '30 Olds coupé

  5. '47 Crosley

  6. '38 Lincoln touring convertible

  7. '40 Chevrolet coupé

  8. '47 MG-TC

  9. '51 Sunbeam Talbot

  10. '48 Morris Minor convertible

  11. '51 Morris Minor sedan

  12. '52 MG-TD

  13. '55 Austin Healey

  14. '56 MG Magnette

  15. '60 Chevrolet Corvair

  16. '58 Chevrolet station wagon

  17. '59 Alfa Romeo Giuletta Sprint coupé

  18. '62 Fiat 600

  19. '60 Fiat 1800 station wagon

  20. '70 Opel Kadett statio wagon

  21. '73 Volvo 144

  22. '67 MGB-GT

  23. '77 Renault 6TL

  24. '70 Jaguar XJ

  25. '84 Ford Thunderbird

  26. '87 Renault II

  27. '90 Volvo 740 sedan

  28. '91 Renault 19 Chamade

  29. '93 Ford Thunderbird LX
If you're interested in the document we found in the files, a scan is behind the cut like so )
substitute: (ratfink)
Autoweek is the leading U.S. newsweekly for automotive enthusiasts and the industry.

I syndicated three of Autoweek magazine's new RSS feeds:

[livejournal.com profile] autoweek — Latest headlines and breaking news

[livejournal.com profile] autoweek_sports — Motorsports news

[livejournal.com profile] autoweekreviews — Vehicle reviews

Enjoy!

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