If profit was the only goal all the big 3 would stop building small cars period, at least in this country. They lost a huge market to foreign car makers due to the lack of profit and the short site of management a whole segment of car sales has been lost and may never be regained. They have now wised up it is hoped to continue even if large profits are not there. When $2500 is spent before the first part is built you are at a definite disadvantage to start with. Health care, legacy cost, legal fees, ect. Due to this the next generation will not have what we had. They will now be responsible for more of the cost for meds. if not all and their own retirement. There is no longer a pension for GM salary workers. I know mine was frozen at 17 yrs. The cost of competition! With a global economy. Many things will be changing, lets hope it benefits everyone.
On a different note it was a dream to use an EV1 with my metro engine. Boy would I like to see the mileage with that aero combo. Couldn't talk them into giving me one! LOL. Many were used for test mules some are still around. Most of the cars I think the Smithonian got one complete with charger the only one. All others just got the car. Thank liabilities and the fact that other museums sold vehicles after they were donated stopped that practice. Most donated vehicles today are lent, they retain ownership. Sad situation. |
Hubble Pie!
Ok 0% emmision was a buzz word used by the industry to describe vehicles that met CA. newest emmision standards without needing any changes! Several of GM's and others met these standards out of the box. Sorry to have spoke out of turn! As to the statement about getting them out of the hot seat the industry has a bad image for using fossil fuels. By changing to alternative fuels that don't pollute from the veh., it transfers the problem to those that will provide power, be it elec. or hydrogen which takes some sort of power source to produce in large quanities. That is a big reason for the push for E85 it's green and renewable, just wish it gave the same bang for the buck (no loss in FE).
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I'd love to see some European cars like the Opel
To clarify, Opel is owned by GM but based in Germany.
Available pretty much anywhere except the USA as far as I know. Opel Corsa https://cache.jalopnik.com/assets/res..._corsa_opc.jpg Next, the Opel Eco Speedster tops out at 155 mph (250 km/h) and clocked an average fuel economy of 113 mpg over a 24-hour road test. https://www.flixxy.com/fuel-economy-performance-car.htm Who says FE and performance are mutually exclusive? M |
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ma4t -
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Attachment 571 Now, the Astra is one level up in size from the Opel Corsa, so I would like a smaller Fit/Yaris/Versa model too. Check this out : Smaller Saturn in the Works? SaturnFans.com - June 11, 2007 https://www.saturnfans.com/Cars/Futur...ctsaturn.shtml Quote:
EDIT : It looks like it wouldn't get here for YEARS!!! Quote:
CarloSW2 |
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The best automotive gas engines might break 25% on at peak power, but they're efficiency is abysmal at normal driving speeds. Even old power plants are more efficient than a gas engine. Add regeneration to the mix, and electric car efficiency beats gas cars by a huge margin. |
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The only way I see to get max mileage from both gasoline and E85 would be to run a turbocharger or supercharger with a variable pressure valve, that will allow you to run anywhere from 10 to 15 to 1 compression at the turn of a knob. But with a reliable source of E85, you could build the engine to run it from the getgo. |
Sludgy -
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CarloSW2 |
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Problem in this country would the puplic put up with any inconvinence? Or have to turn knobs? |
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