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Chevrolet Tahoe and GMC Yukon Hybrid
Chevy Tahoe/GMC Yukon Hybrid

301 messages, Last post on Nov 23, 2009 at 10:58 AM
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Nov 12, 2007 5:09 pm) Both of these are significant accomplishments." I understand your point, but I will wait to see what MPG the vehicles get in actual useage. The same point was made about the Sierra Hybrid P/U, and it was dismal in actual performance. If the difference is 1 MPG that is not a "whole lot of fuel saved for the country"...
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Replying to: stevedebi (Nov 12, 2007 5:21 pm) Actually, it is when you are talking about such low mileage vehicles. It's more about percentage increase and number of gallons saved and not mpg increase. If real world numbers in a vehicle improve it from 15mpg to 16.5mpg, that is a real world increase of 10%. Toyota camry (I4 engine) is rated at 31 hwy vs Toy. Cam. Hybrid rated at 38 hwy (I don't know what the real world numbers are). That is a about a 23% increase. However (and it's a big however), look at the number of gallons of gas burned over 15,000 miles in a year. Changing from 15mpg (1,000 gallons) to 16.5mpg (909 gallons) saves 91 gallons a year. Changing from 31mpg (483 gallons) to 38mpg (394 gallons) saves only 89 gallons a year. What this shows is the planet would be way better off focusing on getting an extra 1 or 2 mpg out of the worst gas mileage vehicles rather than getting more mileage out of already high mileage vehicles. If they got the same 23% mileage improvement on the trucks, the difference would be even more obvious. Now you'd save 187 gallons a year. Of course, ideally, everyone would change the type/class of vehicle they drive to a smaller and inherently better mileage class, but if that is not going to happen, the real "world saving" differences will be seen improving the gas guzzlers and not the gas sippers. This has all been outlined before, but it was worth repeating because it is not an obvious train of thought. It's really all about using less gallons of gas a year. Improving the worst of the worst will prove far easier (and have a far larger impact) than improving the best of the best.
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Replying to: chadx (Nov 13, 2007 9:27 am) Yes, agreed. This should be our first order of business as a tion, actually 2nd IMHO. 1st.. Every government vehicle Federal or State must be either a hybrid or diesel. 2nd. Every BoF SUV must use the 2-Mode or similar technology 3rd. Every truck must be a diesel 4th. Within 7 yrs all the older technology vehicles must be off the road.
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Nov 13, 2007 3:02 pm) 2nd. Every BoF SUV must use the 2-Mode or similar technology 3rd. Every truck must be a diesel 4th. Within 7 yrs all the older technology vehicles must be off the road. Wait a minute, some people may call that communism. I don't. Agreed, something is got to be done. Above may be some crucial steps. You might want to include some of the tougher CAFE standards which the auto companies are against. Every bit counts for the larger gas-a-hog trucks or SUVs whether we save 1 mpg or more. With gas prices in some areas in CA hitting close to $5,00 a gallon and slated to go higher every bit counts. A good time to overfill your air in the tires by a few pounds to add some extra MPG on your vehicle. That seems to work well for me. Saw a good show in CNBC "Street Signs" Pardon my ignorance, but what does BoF stand for? Yea, I know I've been living in the west coast too long.
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Replying to: galvang (Nov 13, 2007 10:15 pm) This is what most SUVs are, a body on a truck ladder frame. OTOH the newer lighter and more fuel efficient vehicles are Crossovers. These are similar or even larger inside but they use a unibody construction like a car does. The first Crossover was the RAV4 back in 95. The first large volume Crossover was the Lexus RX300 which was an SUV body on a Camry frame. Instead of getting 15-16 mpg most crossovers get 20-23 mpg.
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Nov 14, 2007 7:00 am) Truck frame vs the crossover unibody construction. Ala, Ford Exploder Vs. Buick Enclave. Got it thanks. The Yukon is BoF.
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Replying to: galvang (Nov 14, 2007 12:12 pm) This will leave.. Tahoe, Yukon, Escalade, Suburban, Expedition, Aspen/Durango, Sequoia, 4Runner, FJ, Armada, Xterra |
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Replying to: sherring (Jul 11, 2007 3:52 pm) My daughter and son-in-law are leaning now to a Dodge Caravan. I believe the oil companies have the auto manufacturers by the hand and dancing into record profits. The little bit of extra mileage they are getting makes it not worth the while to buy the expensive junk. If I was to buy a new car it would be a Toyota Prius just to make the oil companies eat their high priced gas.
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Retail prices for the new Tahoe/Yukon Hybrids are officially announced. I found this on Detroit News: GM said the Chevrolet Tahoe Hybrid's suggested retail price would be $50,490 (two-wheel drive) and $53,295 (four-wheel drive), while the GMC Yukon Hybrid would be $50,945 (2WD); and $53,755 (4WD). Those prices include a $900 destination charge and pending IRS approval, could be eligible for a federal tax credit. All I can say is WOWSA!! You can drive a LONG way for the 10K premium people. So much for the theory that they were going to almost cost the same. This officially means I will be looking elsewhere for my next vehicle. I'm not getting into a vehicle that STARTS out costing the same as the first condo we ever owned. Sorry but I just don't see the value everyone.
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Replying to: wallacew (Nov 14, 2007 3:42 pm) I'm with you. My 1998, last of the good Suburbans, was a very well built vehicle. The new stuff is tinny crap with plastic bumpers. Much of it was forced onto the automakers by lame government regulations. I should have never sold my 98 Suburban. It was 7 years old, trouble free with only 45k miles. I bought a 2005 GMC hybrid PU that was built out of tin foil. The new ones are even tinnier. The only thing my Suburban needed was a small diesel engine to be the perfect vehicle. I think the EPA, automakers and the oil companies are tied together. They keep adding more devices to clean the air a tiny bit more and never worry about the MPG. We keep buying as much oil, have lots more stuff to replace on the vehicles and the EPA has bragging rights on the infinitesimal amount they cleaned up the exhaust. All three win and the consumer gets the big shaft. |
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