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Hybrids - News, Reviews and Views in the Press

567 messages, Last post on Oct 30, 2009 at 9:21 PM
You are in the Hybrid Vehicles Forum. Your Host is pf_flyer
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Next Gen Prius = 62 MPG? Really? That might get me into a Prius.
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DEAR FORUM FAMILY, I HAVE A 2007 TOYOTA CAMRY HYBRID. BOUGHT IT USED AND THE GMC USED AUTO DEALER CHANGED THE OIL, ETC.., BUT COULD NOT TURN OFF THE "MAINTENANCE NEEDED WARNING LIGHT?" CAN I DO THIS MYSELF? NO KEY, JUST A IGNTION FOB AND THEN PUSH A BUTTON TO START. THANK YOU, RICK1946
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Replying to: rick1946 (Jan 28, 2009 2:54 pm) 2. Turn your car off. 3. Push the odometer button (from Step 1) again and hold it during Steps 4 and 5. 4. Turn your car on. 5. Wait a few seconds while 5 indicators in your display screen cycle on. 6. Your display will tell you that the maintenance warning reset is complete. |
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This story about an explosion of an RX400h is kinda scary http://gas2.org/2009/02/04/doctor-critically-injured-after-his-lexus-hybrid-expl- odes/ No indication of a bomb involved in early reports, but it's hard to imagine that the car itself exploded and could be felt a mile away. I know there's the combination of high voltage and explosive liquids invloved, but wow. And you know how this will play out if nothing beynd the car is involved. We'll have the great hybrid scare of 2009 play out in the media |
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Now they're saying a bomb was involved http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/02/04/doctor.car.blast/index.html |
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 10:35 am) I'll eat the front seat of my TCH over a 5-day period, with gravy, if a hybrid car ever explodes because of an explosive failure of a hybrid component. That's just a highly, highly unlikely scenario. I see freeway Car-B-Ques all the time in the Big City, but none of them have ever been a hybrid, to my knowledge. |
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 10:35 am)
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Feb 04, 2009 10:54 am) Back on news items... Ford Motor (F) says it will have plug-in hybrid electric vehicles in showrooms in 2012, promising 30 miles on battery power before the gasoline engine kicks in. Ford plans to underscore that promise with an announcement here today that it has contracted for lithium-ion battery cells with Johnson Controls-Saft, a U.S.-French joint venture that manufactures the batteries in France. http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2009-02-02-ford-plug-in-hybrid_N.htm
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 11:14 am) In brief discussions with Toyota personell at the Prius preview to the DC Auto show they noted that PHEVs will be part of the mix in the future but at the moment there just isn't that much money to be made from them. IOW they don't see much urgency to rush any PHEV vehicle to market because the vast vast vast majority of the US population is not ready technologically nor from a usage pov. The technology must progress and the public must get a taste for what these vehicles can do but how many will actually be sold? Not many. 'Not many' means not much money to be made. |
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They don't say if this is a diesel hybrid, and turns out it's not, but it SHOULD BE DARNIT !!! VW Touareg Hybrid
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