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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

What is this discussion about? Toyota Camry Hybrid, Toyota Highlander Hybrid, Honda Civic, Hybrid Cars


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#489 of 567
Re: TURNING OFF MAINTENANCE WARNING LIGHT [rick1946] by larsb
Jan 29, 2009 (7:09 am)
Reply

Replying to: rick1946 (Jan 28, 2009 2:54 pm)

1. Set your odometer display to "Trip A."
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.
#490 of 567
Explosion? by pf_flyer HOST
Feb 04, 2009 (10:34 am)
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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
#491 of 567
More details by pf_flyer HOST
Feb 04, 2009 (10:35 am)
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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
#492 of 567
Re: More details [pf_flyer] by larsb
Feb 04, 2009 (10:45 am)
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 10:35 am)

An "exploding hybrid" which exploded because of it's hybrid-ness would have to explode from the battery area, I would guess.
 
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.
#493 of 567
Re: More details [pf_flyer] by kdhspyder
Feb 04, 2009 (10:54 am)
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 10:35 am)

Timely retraction/clarification. Fostering unfounded fears is the what the irresponsible do. An interesting side note apparently is that the design of the hybrid system can withstand the effect of a bomb exploded in the front of the vehicle without involving the hybrid battery. I seriouisly doubt that Toyota designed the vehicle to withstand such an event...but nevertheless good engineering.
#494 of 567
Re: More details [kdhspyder] by pf_flyer HOST
Feb 04, 2009 (11:14 am)
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Feb 04, 2009 10:54 am)

If it HAD been some freak hybrid explosion and felt a mile away, I would have thought there would be not much left of the vehicle. Even with it turning out not to be the car that exploded, you can see the need to dramatize everything. An explosion "felt a mile away" would seem to have done more damage than the photos I've seen.
 
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
#495 of 567
Re: More details [pf_flyer] by kdhspyder
Feb 04, 2009 (12:12 pm)
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Replying to: pf_flyer (Feb 04, 2009 11:14 am)

I posted this over on the Toyota 2009 thread...
 
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.
#496 of 567
They should have put a diesel in this one by larsb
Mar 12, 2009 (7:07 am)
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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
#497 of 567
Re: They should have put a diesel in this one [larsb] by gagrice
Mar 13, 2009 (1:00 pm)
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Replying to: larsb (Mar 12, 2009 7:07 am)

The TSI is a gas engine. Too bad so sad. They are supposed to be delivering the Touareg V6 TDI to dealers this Spring. Uses Urea so is off my list. Watching for a used ML320 CDI to get my diesel SUV. The others are all Urea and trouble in the making.
#498 of 567
Are hybrids on their death bed? by gagrice
Mar 17, 2009 (5:08 am)
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Hybrid car sales go from 60 to 0 at breakneck speed
 
By Ken Bensinger
March 17, 2009
The Ford and Honda hybrids due out this month are among dozens planned for the coming years as automakers try to meet new fuel-efficiency standards and please politicians overseeing the industry's multibillion-dollar bailout.
 
Unfortunately for the automakers, hybrids are a tough sell these days.
 
In July, U.S. Toyota dealers didn't have enough Prius models in stock to last two days, and many were charging thousands of dollars above sticker price for the few they had.
 
Today there are about 80 days' worth on hand, and dealers are working much harder -- even with the help of $500 factory rebates -- to move the egg-shaped gas-savers off lots from Santa Monica to Miami.
 
This month, Honda is offering $2,000 in cash, financing and leasing incentives to buyers of the formerly sold-out Civic hybrid, while a dealer in northern Michigan is dangling $6,000 cash back to those willing to buy a hulking Chevy Tahoe hybrid.
 
The hybrid flood marks a lasting commitment to a powertrain technology that currently represents only about 2% of U.S. vehicle sales and, by most accounts, is deeply unprofitable.
 
Toyota said last year that it was finally making money on the Prius after nearly a decade producing it, but executives at other automakers acknowledge that they lose money on every hybrid sold. "If we were making money on the Civic hybrid, we weren't making a lot," Honda spokesman Chris Martin said.

 
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hybrid17-2009mar17,0,6682265.story

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