Why can't automakers develop 2 lines of engines? Super efficient 80-
100hp units to go into the Taurus, Accord, Camry, Malibu, etc. and cause
the cars to be able to get 50-60mpg. And then a line of perforamce
engines for these cars that put out 160hp and get 30mpg. Now, if you
look at cars, there isn't much difference in the performance between the
base 4 bangers and the optional V6 engines. The V6 will put out maybe
20-30HP more in power, and MPG's are usually about the same in the inline
4 and the V6.
I, for one, would rather cut my gas bill in half and have a 90hp engine
than have a 160hp engine.
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Interesting concept, but I don't think it will sell until gas hits $5 a
gallon.
Sure, the latest round of prices put a small dent into Hummer and Navigator
sales, but the mid range cars are still selling and we still like to stomp
on the gas to get on the expressway. I just bought a new car. Did I
downsize to get better mileage? No. Within a few miles per gallon, it was
not even a consideration as to what I should buy.
I'd like to see what percentages of 4 and 6 cylinder engines sell in the
cars that offer both. Altima seems to be moving a fair amount of the 2.5
liter but my guess is that initial price of the vehicle is more of a
consideration than horsepower. The difference is about $3000. Same with the
Lucerne when I was considering them. The added $3k was more of a deterrent
than the 2 mpg difference. Having driven the V8, I'd have gone that way if
the initial price difference was much less.
I do know of one person that now drive 5 mph slower to get better mileage
from his F150 pickup though. He is the only one that does from what I can
see.
We have had similar discussions before. I am wondering, out of curiosity, do you
live in city, suburbia, or country and how much do you drive per day and what do
you drive now?
I live in Katy, Texas (west Houston suburb) and drive 25 miles one way towards
downtown to work every day (and 25 miles back) on the Katy Freeway (west I-10).
On a good day it takes me 45 minutes at 05:40 and 55 minutes at 18:00. I hate to
give up my 92 Grand Am - it gets 24 mpg city and 27 freeway and can still burn the
tires through an intersection but it has 196k on it now. Still does not use oil
between 5k changes.
Also another hurdle along the way in the last 2 decades is the EPA
requirements for exhaust gases.
--
Jonny
"Grappletech" <no...@yodoor.biz> wrote in message
news:Xns984DDC329C3A...@38.119.71.210...
mike hunt
"Grappletech" <no...@yodoor.biz> wrote in message
news:Xns984DDC329C3A...@38.119.71.210...
mike hunt
"« Paul »" <"=?x-user-defined?Q?=AB?= Paul
=?x-user-defined?Q?=BB?="@houston.rr.com> wrote in message
news:451DE686...@houston.rr.com...
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. The difference in mpg is so negligable that
it makes sense to buy the bigger car. Most every car is putting out like
about 180HP and getting 25-35 mpg. If they were engineered/tuned
differently, I bet a 80hp 60mpg car is very possible.
I live in a small town about an hour away from a large city. I work nearby
so only drive about 10 miles per day on average. We do go on road trips a
lot. I drive a 2004 Kia Sedona minivan, and the wife drives a '99 Olds 88
3800. Up until a year ago, I did have a long commute.
Thanks. I have a better understanding of your view point now. I don't disagree
with it. I had pictured you as living in NYC and not owning a vehicle. Someday I
would like to work less than 25 miles away - and still make decent money.
Paul.
>
> Yeah, that's what I'm saying. The difference in mpg is so negligable that
> it makes sense to buy the bigger car. Most every car is putting out like
> about 180HP and getting 25-35 mpg. If they were engineered/tuned
> differently, I bet a 80hp 60mpg car is very possible.
>
You have to remember that engineers and marketers have thought of all of
these things long before this discussion. If it were that easy to get 60 to
80 mpg out of cars and still maintain any degree of usefulness, those cars
would be in production. There are enough people like you who would trade
every other aspect of a car in favor of mileage, to make it worth the
product line.
Do you think there's a reason that those cars don't exist? Think about the
trade-off's in such things as minimum horsepower requirements to be usefull
as more than just a vehicle to run city blocks. Think about the need for
vehicles to actually be able to maintain legal and safe speeds over hills -
long hills like we find commonly in the US and which are not so uncommon in
other parts of the world. Think about durability. Think about comfort.
Not luxury - simple comfort. Think about safety. Crush zones and integral
roll cage type construction is not the complete answer. Nor are offset
front end crash tests. They only reveal part of the story.
I'm not even sure that 60-80 mph is really obtainable in practical terms,
and I really don't think it is in consideration of all other facets of an
automobile.
--
-Mike-
mmarlo...@alltel.net
I've seen several on the freeway. Decent looking car. I'll have to check them
out along with Ford Fusion.
"Mike Marlow" <mma...@alltel.net> wrote in message
news:16658$451ed3ae$471fbb6d$19...@ALLTEL.NET...
> Just like 100 mpg carbs, there are still people out there that believe
> in fairies...
No fairies involved. I think mpg's haven't really gone too much up because
automakers have instead focused on wringing out extra horsepower. They've
improved gas mileage on huge vehicles. Modern Chevy Suburbans/Tahoes get
around 25mpg highway as opposed to like 10mpg 20 years ago. I can see
continually improving the performance of performance cars like Mustangs,
Vettes, 350zx, etc., but it'd be cool to offer a 60-70mpg regular car.
Totally illogical.
Can get double the HP from same or equivalent engine over two decades,
remain within increased EPA pollutant standards.
Yet, cannot increase mpg without increasing HP dramatically. In fact, don't
increase mpg over two decades. Nope. Total crap. A token 30+ mpg as
fantastic in new vehicles, not. Consider selling used cars to little old
ladies.
Consider mass/weight vs. hp vs. mpg formula. The only thing that has really
increased is hp and vehicle weight. Hp in an given engine size is directly
proportional to higher mpg in a smaller engine moving the same mass/weight.
Vehicles getting 30+ mpg two decades ago could go 90-100 mph on the highway.
Don't remember any of them being GM though. These vehicles approximated
2000 pounds in weight. The current makers of these vehicles are dragging
their feet as well for better mpg. Their vehicle weight more/more mass.
Most vehicles today exceed well over 2000 pounds. Whose fault is that Mr.
SUV, or "safe" vehicle? You got what the market determined you wanted. And
they were probably right. So, look in the mirror for fault Mr. SUV safe
vehicle.
--
Jonny
mike hunt
"Jonny" <spamyo...@blackworm.net> wrote in message
news:KeJTg.1293$Lv3...@newsread1.news.pas.earthlink.net...
mike hunt
"ROY BRAGG" <rbr...@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:4iJTg.436$If3.258@trnddc07...
mike hunt
"Jonny" <spamyo...@blackworm.net> wrote in message news:eEJTg.1299.
--
Snag aka OSG #1
'76 FLH "Bag Lady"
BS132 SENS NEWT
"A hand shift is a manly shift ."
<shamelessly stolen >
none to one to reply
> "Mike Hunter" <mike...@mailcity.com> wrote in message
> news:TJCdnUMnDIX...@ptd.net...
>> Even a small one passenger motorcycle, that is barely capable of 65
>> MPH, can not attain much more than 50 MPG
>>
>>
> Bullshit . My wife's Kaw EX250 , when driven sanely , usually
> exceeds 50
> mpg . And that's around town , it gets better mileage on the highway ,
> again , if driven sanely . BTW , this bike , in stock form , is
> capable of speeds in excess of 100 mph ...
>
Also, don't forget the moped craze of the late '70's/early '80's that
arised after the gas shortages/scares of the 1970's. These things got
120mpg and could do 35mph and this was using 1970's technology. They only
cost $250-$300 brand new down at the Honda/Yamaha/Suzuki dealership. I
lived in a semi-small city in a decent climate area back in the late '70's.
Tons of people drove mopeds around town back then. And before I get
flamed, yes, obviously, I realize they're not practical for highway travel.
But for short trips around town to work or school, etc., they're great.
Outside the local diners/cafes, there'd be 2 or 3 mopeds out front
belonging to the old men who were inside drinking coffee and perhaps one
owned by the waitress. Ir ecently bought a Suzuki FA50 Shuttle for $80
from a barn that looks this this one:
http://www.mopedarmy.com/photos/brand/44/2893/
After a carb rebuild and some fuel line cleaning, it runs great. I scoot
around town on it. As I was loading it into the back of the minivan, my
wife was pissed, of course. "Why are you spending money on junk!" Then I
explained the mpg advantage and plus it's just fun to ride! At least I
didn't drop $13000 on a Harley!
Get a REAL bike.... ;-)
My 1200 Venture will turn in 45-50 mpg. That is a full dress touring
bike with the ability to turn well over 100mph VERY WELL OVER....
Now if you want to look at a mileage car it's real simple. Buy some
little tiny car like a Geo or something. Just don't EVER get into an
accident with it....
--
Steve W.
> Also, don't forget the moped craze of the late '70's/early '80's that
> arised after the gas shortages/scares of the 1970's. These things got
> 120mpg and could do 35mph and this was using 1970's technology. They only
> cost $250-$300 brand new down at the Honda/Yamaha/Suzuki dealership. I
> lived in a semi-small city in a decent climate area back in the late '70's.
> Tons of people drove mopeds around town back then. And before I get
> flamed, yes, obviously, I realize they're not practical for highway travel.
> But for short trips around town to work or school, etc., they're great.
> Outside the local diners/cafes, there'd be 2 or 3 mopeds out front
> belonging to the old men who were inside drinking coffee and perhaps one
> owned by the waitress. Ir ecently bought a Suzuki FA50 Shuttle for $80
> from a barn that looks this this one:
>
> http://www.mopedarmy.com/photos/brand/44/2893/
>
> After a carb rebuild and some fuel line cleaning, it runs great. I scoot
> around town on it. As I was loading it into the back of the minivan, my
> wife was pissed, of course. "Why are you spending money on junk!" Then I
> explained the mpg advantage and plus it's just fun to ride! At least I
> didn't drop $13000 on a Harley!
>
Yeah, wives are like that. Several men at work ride motor bikes to work. A
co-worker buys a new BMW every time they come out with a new one. Another friend
got a ticket a few weeks ago for doing 140 in West Texas... cost him $300+. I
rode a newer BMW. Gets 40 mpg and 0-90 mph in less than 5 seconds. Talk about
exhilarating! Yes, a decent bike may be the way to go! Except in the summer...
Burning hot sun and pavement is a real problem. And many bikes overheat if not
moving.
> The current Camry with a 4 cy engine, is a good example of a car that gets
> good mileage for a car that size, but it too can not get our of its own way.
> I see fully loaded tractor trailers pass them on long grades on the
> interstates ;)
It's rated to do 0-60 MPH in under 10 secs. Is that considered barely
adequate nowadays?
That depends on how much under 10 seconds. 10 seconds is certainly a long
time to get up to 60.
--
-Mike-
mmarlo...@alltel.net
mike hunt
"Snag" <sna...@bellsouth.net> wrote in message
news:WURTg.27658$eW5....@bignews5.bellsouth.net...
I own a 1972 Honda CL70, purchased new. Top speed around 65 MPH, best
mileage per tank full is around 45, if not driven above 45 MPH. My Fat Boy
will get close to that with two up, on a flat road, if I'm lucky ;)
mike hunt
"Snag" <sna...@bellsouth.net> wrote in message
news:M56Ug.31986$tT6....@bignews7.bellsouth.net...
mike hunt
"Mike Marlow" <mma...@alltel.net> wrote in message
news:7dc1e$4520f469$471fbb6d$18...@ALLTEL.NET...
mike hunt
"« Paul »" <"=?x-user-defined?Q?=AB?= Paul
=?x-user-defined?Q?=BB?="@houston.rr.com> wrote in message
news:45203E9E...@houston.rr.com...
mike hunt
"Jonny" <spamyo...@blackworm.net> wrote in message
news:e67Ug.4116$Y24....@newsread4.news.pas.earthlink.net...
And just don't EVER get into an accident while on a motorcycle...
My brother-in-law bought a Dyna about 5 years ago. A purple one!
ick.......then his wife, my sister, wanted one, so they got her a Sportster
1200 Custom 2 years ago. A friend of mine bought a mid 90's Sporster 883
for $3800. It had only 2000 miles on it. The original owner bought it
brand new and basically hardly ever drove it but did keep fresh gas in it
and changed the oil regulary and rode it occasioanlly. I'd like to pick up
a Sportster 883. I like them. My wife refuses to ride on a motorcycle, so
I don't have to worry about hauling around a passenger. Plus, I'm kinda
short -- 5'8". I've owned several bikes over the years. My first 2 bikes
were hand me downs from my uncle -- a Honda 70, then a Suzuki 125 dual
purpose, then I bought a mid 70's Honda CB500, then I had a Honda Trail 90.
Then I bought this Suzuki FA50 Shuttle, cool, cool moped. Now, time for a
Sportster!
Missed it Snag, But it is a Hardly after all.... ;-)
I had a chance to buy a Harley a couple weeks ago, Just couldn't get
comfortable in the saddle. Plus I LOVE the way my Venture handles. Since
mine now has a full out VMax engine now it is even more fun.
Not a problem. Ever read any of Daniel Meyers books. He REALLY rides...
http://lifeisaroad.com/
I'm a novice compared to him. But have done a few Iron Butt rides, Did
an Alaska run and a loop through the states. The poor Venture is
currently torn down for a bit of preventative work, and maybe some new
paint...
Neal Peart (drummer from the rock band 'Rush') went on a 2 year 25,000
mile motorcycle trip. He drove across Canada up to Alaska, down to the
USA, crisscrossed the USA a couple of times, then drove through Mexico,
Middle America, South America, then back up through S. American,
M.America, Mexico then again across the USA then back up to Canada. He
did it on a BMW 1100(?) dual-purpose bike. He wrote a book about the
trip -- "Ghost Rider". Excellent and interesting book. Sometimes, some
of his friends would hook up with him to ride a stretch of the trip with
him, but mostly he was by himself. The morning that he left to start
the trip, he drove down to the local gas station and the kid who works
there filled his tank up with diesel! So he thought that might be a bad
omen but it wasn't.
Another guy, back in the late 70's, took his moped on a 15,000 mile trip
through Canada, Yukon, Alaska. interesting stuff:
http://wmuma.com/moped78/index.html
It brings elegance to the driving experience much the way a chandelier
does to a bathroom, and it truly reflects the finest in Southern and
Midwestern tastes.
>
> Mike Hunter wrote:
>> The Grand Marquis is still the best buy on the market today. Nothing
>> else in the 18K to 22K range brand new even comes close. ;)
Cops seem to dig them, and their Ford clone: the Crown Victoria. Cops love
those V8 RWD cars like Crown Vic/Marquis, Dodge Diplomat/Plymouth Gran
Fury, Chevy Caprice/Impala. Our small town police dept. uses the newer FWD
V6 (3800) Chevy Impalas. What do you all's police dept's use?
A friend of mine had a really cool '88 Dodge Diplomat with the Interceptor
package -- 360ci, HD everything. He paid like $400 for it at an auction.
Fast car.
mike hunt
"grappletech" <no...@removenowhere.biz> wrote in message
news:1159907...@sp6iad.superfeed.net...
Wifey's Rebel 250 will only get to 80 with me on board, but I weigh more the
engine's displacement. It is a 50 mpg plus bike, so good on gas it ain't
worth checking the MPG
Had a '82 Civic w/auto trans. 1.5 65 HP tin can, on the highway it was a
rolling Jap coffin. Top speed on the flat, 85 after a 5 mile run.
But for $400 on a low budget it beat walking at the time.
--
John
"anything you say can & will be misquoted & used against you"
'01 FLHR ''Red"
'04 MXZ 600
'06 GSX SDI
Inlet Barnstormers - BRC mem.
A lot of it is WEIGHT. cars aren't getting any lighter; despite
improvements in technology and engineering (one can save weight by
using compter modeling to make parts only as heavy as they absolutely
need to be to perform reliably) possible weight savings are negated by
upsizing and upcontenting just about every model line. Compare a
current VW Golf to the original Rabbit and you'll see what I mean, but
this is by no means the only example. Personally I'd be ecstatic if I
could buy a simple, basic 2-seater that weighed maybe 2000-2500 lbs.
and I bet it could perform well and get good fuel economy too. But the
insurance industry (2-seaters are bad, m'kay) federal safety
regulations (airbags add weight, as do door beams, rollover protection,
etc. not to mention the possibly soon-to-be-mandatory ABS and DSC) and
simple market pressures (people still tend to buy the biggest car they
can afford, as they assume that "bigger and more expensive must equal
better") pretty much ensure that that won't happen, unless I go with an
expensive, high-performance model.
nate
nate
Mike Hunter wrote:
> The current Camry with a 4 cy engine, is a good example of a car that gets
> good mileage for a car that size, but it too can not get our of its own way.
> I see fully loaded tractor trailers pass them on long grades on the
> interstates ;)
>
> mike hunt
>
>
> "ROY BRAGG" <rbr...@verizon.net> wrote in message
> news:4iJTg.436$If3.258@trnddc07...
> > It's possible to have high mpg with low horsepower, but would you drive
> > one of them? Consider merging onto freeways where power is needed, plus
> > us in the south (especially Texas) will not give up our a/c in a car. I
> > once owned a 1979 Eldorado diesel with 115 horsepower. It was nice for
> > cruising, but never broke 24 mpg at best. Plus, whenever you pulled on
> > the freeway you floored it and prayed you made it. Personally I'd rather
> > have the power of my 3.8 Impala that can get 33 on the highway in great
> > comfort.
> > Roy
> > "Mike Hunter" <mike...@mailcity.com> wrote in message
> > news:8S6dnYYoqYp...@ptd.net...
> >> Todays Accord is a much larger car, because that is what the American
> >> buyer prefers to buy. Honda still makes a car, the size of the eighties
> >> Accord that get 35 MPG. It is called the Civic. ;)
> >>
> >>
> >> mike hunt
> >>
> >>
> >> "Grappletech" <no...@yodoor.biz> wrote in message
> >> news:Xns984DDC329C3A...@38.119.71.210...
mike hunt
"N8N" <njn...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1160048667.2...@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
mike hunt
"N8N" <njn...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1160048943....@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/products/gear/2005-08-14-hybrid-tinkering_x.htm
mike hunt
"Gosi" <gos...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1160068254.8...@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
What would be awesome would be, say, something like a 914 or X1/9 with
a modern, powerful yet efficient engine like the VW TDI. It would have
to be drastically decontented to meet my price criteria, but I'm OK
with that.
I guess I must not be your average car buyer...
nate
My dad once raced a friend through a twisty/windy mountain road back in the
70's. My dad was driving an Austin Bugeye Sprite and his friend was in a
Charger with a 440ci. My dad's time was better than the other guy's
elapsed time, so my dad won because of the superior handling of the Austin
Sprite. It would be cool to get one of these tiny little British roadster
(Sprite, MG Midget, etc..) and install, let's say, a Toyota 4AGE (1600cc
DOHC 16V) in it. There is a racing circuit in Europe that people drive old
Lotuses, Trimuph and MG's in, and most of the cars have more modern
Japanese engines.
Didn't Top Gear do a hillclimb challenge between an old guy in a Sprite
and some modern "tuner" car recently? IIRC the Sprite spanked the tuner
car, as you'd expect. It was a little hokey (the "tuner car" had Lambo
doors, playstation, etc. but the owner seemed to think it was fast) but
proved a point. At least a Charger is a real car.
I'm not really into old British stuff, but a Beck spyder might make a
good base for an "econo-sportster" if you could get past the price tag.
nate
--
replace "fly" with "com" to reply.
http://home.comcast.net/~njnagel
GM will soon be out of business
You are wrong about the quickly bit
Quality takes a long time
>The current Camry with a 4 cy engine, is a good example of a car that gets
>good mileage for a car that size, but it too can not get our of its own way.
>I see fully loaded tractor trailers pass them on long grades on the
>interstates ;)
>
>mike hunt
BUICK Century with a 3.1L engine.
That's about 185 cu inches...
Considerably smaller then the 6's of the 60's and 70's
At first, I thought it underpowered,
but since then, I've learned to drive with my head,
not the gas pedal.
It's no speed demon,
30 > 35 mpg on the interstate more than makes up for it !
<rj>
good point.......many, many times while I'm trying to merge onto the
highway, there's some dipshit moron in front of me who's doing like 35mph
at the point the entrance ramp meets the highway and they're in a 220hp
modern car. So it's driver error. I've owned econobox hatchback type cars
with 65hp that you could easily get up to 55-65mph before merging.
mike hunt
"<RJ>" <bara...@localnet.com> wrote in message
news:1rqqi2ljfrstb67fb...@4ax.com...
Downgrade? Tailwind? or better yet, downgrade with a tailwind.
-- PJ