Booting hybrids from carpool lanes slows all |
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NoSUV
New Slug Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: Pele - previously asked and answered. Your concerns have been proved bogus. |
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NoSUV
New Slug Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: Not all of this is true. I've had my hybrid for 140K and have yet to replace the hybrid battery. Can you say the same for your regular battery? There is no difference in the brake pad wear from a non-hybrid vehicle. But you are correct in that there are 2 batteries. |
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Dale H
New Slug Joined: 18 May 2009 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: In the context of the article you posted, which dealt with commuting times and not pollution, my comments are Quite Correct. If you want to talk about pollution we can, of course. quote: My understanding is that the 20% number was calculating assuming a mix of city and highway driving. The HOV lanes do not present such a mix. It is all highway. I went to www.fueleconomy.gov to see how comparable cars compare in highway gas milage between hybrid and conventional models. According to them, a conventional 2011 Camry with a 2,5 liter 4 cylinder engine and automatic transmission gets 32 mpg. A hybrid Camry with 2.4 liter 4 cylinder engine and automatic transmission gets 35 mpg, or 9.375% more. I am not sure exactly how mpg relates to emmisions, but I am certain that a 9.375% increase in gas milage does not translate into an 80% reduction in emissions. I am equally certain, based on these numbers, that a single occupant hybrid does not produce less pollution per occupant than a comparable conventional vehicle with three occupants. Dale H |
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Pele
New Slug Joined: 27 May 2008 Location: Virginia Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: Where? ------------------------- Times to beat: Horner Rd to/from Pentagon: 12 mins Without Slugs - 17 mins With slugs Dale City exit to/from 3rd St Tunnel, D.C. 18 mins (No slugs - Holiday) |
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realquick
New Slug Joined: 04 Mar 2013 Location: ca Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: quote: Actually, your both wrong, they need to change their break pads LESS frequently. All diesel trains are hybrids that use regenerative breaking (ie, "hybrid breaking") even though they don't have energy storage BECAUSE it is easier on the breaks. They actually just dissipate the energy produced from regenerative breaking using giant resistors. Think about it, there are only two places the kinetic energy can go when a car slows down. When it uses break pads, all of it goes into rubbing against and heating the break pads which slowly kills them. When a car uses regenerative breaking, the energy goes through a generator into a battery and puts no wear on the break pads. There's not much difference though for hybrid cars b/c most of the wear on break pads comes from quick stops, which hybrid cars still use break pads for. |
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realquick
New Slug Joined: 04 Mar 2013 Location: ca Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: Are you kidding? This article doesn't address any of the issues raised in the LA times article. This is the only useful piece of information in this article: One person in a single location on a single day observed that 20% of the vehicles using the HOV road were hybrids. The average speed in the HOV was 30 - 40 mph, which was slower than free flowing(although he doesn't say by how much). Don't get me wrong, I'm not suggesting that the LA study should be applied to DC, but at least the article is based on a real study. |
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grucker
New Slug Joined: 23 Dec 2010 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Actually, your both wrong, they need to change their break pads LESS frequently. All diesel trains are hybrids that use regenerative breaking (ie, "hybrid breaking") even though they don't have energy storage BECAUSE it is easier on the breaks. They actually just dissipate the energy produced from regenerative breaking using giant resistors.
Think about it, there are only two places the kinetic energy can go when a car slows down. When it uses break pads, all of it goes into rubbing against and heating the break pads which slowly kills them. When a car uses regenerative breaking, the energy goes through a generator into a battery and puts no wear on the break pads. There's not much difference though for hybrid cars b/c most of the wear on break pads comes from quick stops, which hybrid cars still use break pads for. But how are Hybrids on Brake Pads? [:)] |
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colossus911
New Slug Joined: 19 May 2006 Location: VA Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Yep, Journal of Industrial Ecology report from the WSJ. More carbon emissions than gas. Facts are tough things.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324128504578346913994914472.html?mod=rss_opinion_main |
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NoSUV
New Slug Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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quote: Looks like you forgot to read the article, and its assumptions - not facts. It makes assumptions about the manufacture that are not proven, it makes assumptions that are just wrong about the life of component parts, and it makes assumptions that seem unlikely about the total mileage of the vehicle before it is scrapped. Yep - you are wrong AGAIN. BTW, my 2002 Prius is still on the original battery, and has 3x the mileage quoted in the article. Try again when you have FACTS. |
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marchf
New Slug Joined: 29 May 2010 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Instead of Buicks, how about veterans who are fed employees. Or how about just giving me a special pass? Under the hybrid logic, folks are paying for the HOV privilege, but the car dealer is the one who wins. quote: |
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