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Hybrids & Diesels - Deals or Duds? - READ ONLY

5196 messages,  Last post on Oct 16, 2006 at 6:55 AM

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What is this discussion about? Alternative Fuels, Biodiesel, Hybrid Cars


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#2937 of 5196
Re: TOO CORRUPT [gagrice] by jkinzel
Mar 18, 2006 (10:12 am)

Replying to: gagrice (Mar 18, 2006 9:40 am)

Gagrice,
 
There are a few green TDI’s in Tacoma, WA. You could buy new here then take it home via Chicago, New York, Tampa and Phoenix. Should have 7501 miles by then. Makes for a long road trip.
#2938 of 5196
Re: TOO CORRUPT [jkinzel] by gagrice
Mar 18, 2006 (10:23 am)

Replying to: jkinzel (Mar 18, 2006 10:12 am)

I will check those dealers out. I would generally license in a different state that I own property. I used to buy vehicles in Seattle and drive back to Alaska and sell at enough profit to pay for my vacations. Mostly 4WD PU trucks.
#2939 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [john1701a] by gagrice
Mar 18, 2006 (11:18 am)

Replying to: john1701a (Mar 18, 2006 9:58 am)

Then why won't you answer the questions by providing data to support your claim?
 
What is there to support? You tell me you get 49.5 MPG lifetime on your Prius I believe you. Anyone that lies about something like that will get cornered sooner or later. And The gentleman has posted many times that his Jetta is a MT. Is that significant? The end result seems to me more important than what kind of transmission. If you like automatics you should try the DSG. Superior to anything Toyota has to offer in automatic transmissions. They get equal to manual mileage.
 
If you check the people posting on the EPA website. The 2006 Jetta TDI with automatic is averaging 2.5 MPG better than the EPA estimated rating. That is 14 drivers posting. They did not give their name, rank and serial number so we could not check their credentials.
 
The Forum is supposed to be a fun interchange of ideas and such. It should not be an inquisition to those that we oppose their view point.
 
You have made it clear that you feel that the hybrid is the only solution to our energy and emissions problems. You have also posted that the only hybrid that is any good is the Toyota implementation of HSD. That is your opinion and no one is going to change your mind. That does not leave much room for those of us that are not thrilled with Toyota or want to give other alternatives a fair shot at solving the issues we all face.
#2940 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [john1701a] by ruking1
Mar 18, 2006 (12:19 pm)

Replying to: john1701a (Mar 18, 2006 9:58 am)

2003 Prius AVG user 46.3
EPA city/highway/combined 52/45/48
Range 42-54
 
http://www.fueleconomy.gov/mpg/MPG.do?action=mpgData&vehicleID=18608&browser=tru- e
 
2003 VW Jetta AVG user 47.1
EPA city/highway/combined 42/49/49
 
Range 34-63
 
http://www.fueleconomy.gov/mpg/MPG.do?action=mpgData&vehicleID=18615&browser=tru- e
#2941 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [john1701a] by ruking1
Mar 18, 2006 (12:32 pm)

Replying to: john1701a (Mar 18, 2006 9:36 am)

"By the way, yesterday when I proved someone else here attempting to discredit me had lied, it just got ignored. What will you do? "
 
It is YOU that continually seeks to discredit almost anyone who opinion/s' is/are different that your own. Anytime someone advances the discussion or gives you a piece of information to see if you have intergrated it, you react as if you haven't heard a word they said. So why are you surprised when you are ignored?
 
So what will 1 time or 1,000,000 times of identifying the transmission do? You get 49.5. I am just fine with that. Who has called you a liar for saying that? I get 50 mpg in a commute. Suddenly since you perceive me as "THE ENEMY" YOU now need 5 million miles of certified impartially collected test data. Yet there is a very dissatified population of Prius owners on the mileage issue. Seems like you are doing the Toyota tactic of total denial.
 
I should ignore you also.
#2942 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [ruking1] by micheals
Mar 18, 2006 (3:37 pm)

Replying to: ruking1 (Mar 18, 2006 12:32 pm)

I think what John was referring to was that the range was vague and misleading because we have no idea what the conditions are. For instance, I could say that my range in the Prius is 50-65mpg or post 35-70mpg. Without any background information, neither gives a person an accurate representation of my actual mileage over a lifetime.
 
I could go on and on about getting 70 mpg at 70-75 on the interstate, but this may have been under unique circumstances (it has happened to me for a 300 mile stretch). Saying a range without any mention of the conditions is vague and doesn't really help people get an accurate picture of what the mileage generally is.
 
Regardless of who does this, Prius owners or TDI owners, it is still vague. I for one jumped in on the tailend of the discussion and IMO, it is unrealistic to expect a person to read through the 150 pages to know all the specifics of your commute. IMO, posts about any MPG claims should have the details necessary to get an accurate picture of the conditions and the actual mileage.
 
And about this very dissatisfied population of Prius owners? Check out http://www.tdiclub.com and see the threads about people dissatisfied with their mileage. So the sword cuts both ways. The reality is, the Prius still has the highest satisfaction rate of any other vehicle.
 
Since you are curious about the 100mph, one person that did 100 mph for a significant stretch reported 36 mpg. A person that drives an 80+ mph commute reports an average of 40mpg. Driving at 55mph is about 60-65mpg, through extrapolating. Sustained 45mph is 65-70 mpg.
 
In actuality, you don't have to drive like a granny to get 50+ mpg in a Prius. During my 12 mile commute (speeds from 40-65 and lots of stoplights), I drive at or slightly above the speed limit, take corners as fast as I can and always accelarte with traffic and get from 58-62 mpg.
 
You also previously mentioned resale values of diesels. Last time I checked (just a few minutes ago), used Pri hold their value pretty well. A 2003 Prius with 70K miles goes for $17,590, about $2.5K less than the MSRP. Not bad I'd say. With 50K miles, it is $19740, just a few hundred under MSRP! This is suggested retail price at KBB.
 
FWIW, I don't think diesels can't be part of the puzzle, but once they meet CARB requirements, then I will see them as another viable solution. Frankly, I just don't buy the conspiracy theory of why diesels can't be sold in CA and other states. I hope that ULSD and other advances make the diesel more competitive in emissions. Doesn't look good though with VW cutting the TDI's for 07 and sounds like VW has given up on diesels in NA. Either way, getting into a pissing contest about who gets the mileage serves no purpose and makes both sides stall instead of getting the message out that there are fuel efficient vehicles aviable that work in the real world.
#2943 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [ruking1] by kdhspyder
Mar 18, 2006 (3:45 pm)

Replying to: ruking1 (Mar 18, 2006 12:19 pm)

Old data on the Prius ( Gen1 ) and the Jetta ( decrease from '03 to '04? )
 
2004 Gen2 Prius vs Jetta Diesel ( Man Tran )
 
Gen2 Prius
60/51/55 typical user 47 ( 34 units reporting; correlates with GreenHybrid values )
Range: 34-61
Climate change rating: 2.9 T ( Best )
 
Jetta Diesel 5 Manual
38/46/41 typical user 45.4 ( 11 units reporting )
Range: 39-53
Climate change rating 5.2 T
#2944 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [micheals] by gagrice
Mar 18, 2006 (5:10 pm)

Replying to: micheals (Mar 18, 2006 3:37 pm)

A 2003 Prius with 70K miles goes for $17,590
 
I think you will find that a dealer may be able to snag a buyer for that much. If you were trading that same vehicle in. You would be real lucky to get $10k-$11k for it. Same goes for the VW TDI models that are in demand. I think the fear factor goes up with the miles more so on the hybrid than the diesel. There have been two or three posters on here that had sad stories buying high mileage Prius. Not that it is limited to hybrids. Just more things to go wrong after the warranty is up.
 
On the VW TDI after 2007. I posted an article that addresses that subject. The question is will people be willing to pay the extra cost to bring the TDI to SULEV compliance. It will be expensive. Not as expensive as the hybrid premium. I don't know if people will pay extra to get a super clean diesel. If the price of diesel remains higher than unleaded it is doubtful.
#2945 of 5196
Re: TDI may be slow, BUT, [micheals] by ruking1
Mar 18, 2006 (5:18 pm)

Replying to: micheals (Mar 18, 2006 3:37 pm)

Essentially that is NOT what John is referring. So if you are making a case for essentially everything being unmeasurable (vague), why are we even talking? More directly why are any of your assertions any more valid than anyone elses? If you consider 49.5 and 50 as being vaque, then I am not sure what you consider precise.
#2946 of 5196
Audi Diesel no DUD!!! by gagrice
Mar 19, 2006 (8:33 pm)
Audi Sport North America made history Saturday as the diesel-powered Audi R10 TDI of Tom Kristensen, Allan McNish and Rinaldo Capello won the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. The new prototype is the first diesel car in the world to win a major sports car race.
 
Diesel Rules

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