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How does gas at $4 and higher impact you?

2175 messages,  Last post on Nov 05, 2009 at 3:05 PM

You are in the Automotive News & Views Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & claires

What is this discussion about? Gasoline, Fuel Efficiency (MPG)


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#891 of 2175
Re: In tribute to all those fine Wall Streeters... [duke23] by gagrice
Sep 24, 2008 (8:24 pm)
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Replying to: duke23 (Sep 24, 2008 6:13 pm)

good to be Jimmy Buffet. pop top and lost shaker of salt.
 
I'd rather be Jimmy Buffett. More fun and $50 million a year ain't bad for a guy that had his last big hit 35 years ago.
 
You know that Warren is his Uncle?
#892 of 2175
Re: In tribute to all those fine Wall Streeters... [gagrice] by steve_ HOST
Sep 24, 2008 (8:32 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Sep 24, 2008 8:24 pm)

Are Warren and Jimmy Buffett Related?. The DNA says no.
 
In the news, U.S. gasoline inventories lowest since 1967.
#893 of 2175
Re: here we go again? [nippononly] by gagrice
Sep 24, 2008 (8:40 pm)
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Replying to: nippononly (Sep 24, 2008 7:45 pm)

I love the weather where I live. I left CA for Alaska in 1970 because it was getting too crowded for me. I have followed the politics and think overall they stink. Too much control by too few people.
 
Solar still has a ways to go. It has applications. If it was subsidized at a reasonable percentage for home owners I would consider. I have a large roof area that faces South. Though my neighbor has huge pine trees. Not sure how they would affect solar. The last thing I would consider is suing a neighbor under any circumstances. I think that is a big part of what is wrong with America.
 
CNG can be produced at home with PHILL. I believe that Honda just sold their interest in FuelMaker the company that MFG PHILL. Your Natural Gas service has to be able to handle the heavier demand. It takes about 6 hours to fill a Civic GX with a home unit like PHILL. The Current GX is selling for about $26k. Kind of expensive for a Civic. Maximum range is about 280 miles. I think that it is still a commuter only vehicle. You can get a lot of used CNG Crown Vics at State auctions. A friend buys them all the time for his parking lot cleaning service.
#894 of 2175
Re: In tribute to all those fine Wall Streeters... [steve_] by gagrice
Sep 24, 2008 (8:43 pm)
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Replying to: steve_ (Sep 24, 2008 8:32 pm)

Ain't that a bummer, both items.
 
Better get those gulf refineries up and running. Could be intentional, nah.....
#895 of 2175
Re: In tribute to all those fine Wall Streeters... [gagrice] by steve_ HOST
Sep 24, 2008 (8:44 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Sep 24, 2008 8:43 pm)

Maybe maintenance? Seems like a lot of them usually shut down in the fall for repair and to change over to cracking winter gas.
#896 of 2175
Re: here we go again? [andre1969] by mattandi
Sep 24, 2008 (8:51 pm)
Reply

Replying to: andre1969 (Sep 24, 2008 3:45 pm)

Apparently this odd law does not concern itself with which came first, at least not so much. It is keyed to conditions at the time of the installation of the solar panels. In this case, all of the trees preexisted the installation, but the trees were not tall enough to cast shade on the panels when they were installed. Subsequently the trees grew tall enough to shade the panels. That is specifically the situation this law addresses. If the trees had been taller at the time of installation, the owner of the solar panels would have had no cause for complaint.
 
I'm guessing these neighbors will not be inviting each other to their Christmas parties.
#897 of 2175
Re: here we go again? [gagrice] by nippononly
Sep 25, 2008 (7:17 am)
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Replying to: gagrice (Sep 24, 2008 8:40 pm)

You must love that California yesterday entered into an agreement with the Western Climate Initiative, an emissions cap and trade system that includes all the western coastal states and four provinces in Canada....eh?!
 
One of the early designers of the WCI was, yep you guessed it, your good buds at CARB.
 
Beginning in 2012, they will include automotive fuel emissions in the system. Until then, it is just power generators and large emitters like that.
#898 of 2175
Re: here we go again? [nippononly] by steve_ HOST
Sep 25, 2008 (7:53 am)
Reply

Replying to: nippononly (Sep 25, 2008 7:17 am)

England has had a right to light law for almost 200 years, for different reasons. wiki. If solar ever does catch on big time, I could see state legislation happening along those lines.
 
I guess the devil is in the details, but carbon cap and trade should result in lower emissions across the board. The emissions standards will continue to tighten, so companies that sit back and spend money on credits instead of reducing their emissions will find it increasingly expensive to do so.
 
RUG has fallen to an average of $3.73 here, which is a penny below the national average (unless that's changed already). Usually we're a dime or more higher in Idaho, so I'm enjoying it while I can.
#899 of 2175
Re: here we go again? [steve_] by nortsr1
Sep 25, 2008 (11:52 am)
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Replying to: steve_ (Sep 25, 2008 7:53 am)

Pitman, NJ RUG $3.29
#900 of 2175
INSIDE LINE today by kdhspyder
Sep 25, 2008 (12:19 pm)
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Here's one viewpoint that we haven't heard from yet in these posts.
 
Toyota turned things upside down this week with a day-long session it called the Toyota Sustainable Mobility Seminar.
 
We were wined and dined, but only after listening to a parade of top scientists and researchers tell us, in unsparing detail, how the planet is running out of oil and water; how the biofuels we look to as potential replacements for oil aren't worth the power and water it takes to make 'em, and how we now are consuming 40 percent more resources each year than the planet can sustain.
 
It was not, as you can tell, a particularly spirit-lifting session.
 
Bill Reinert, Toyota's North American advanced technology vehicles manager, took to the podium after the morning's sessions, held out his left wrist and, with a downward slashing motion of his right hand told us that after hearing all that had just been said he wanted us to know that the proper way to slit it was vertically, not horizontally.

 
http://blogs.edmunds.com/greencaradvisor/
 
Then this one in the article following, same source.
 
CNG delivers the same fuel economy as gasoline and is considerably less expensive.
 
It also is far cleaner-burning that gasoline, with fewer smog-causing emissions and less carbon dioxide.
 
For Toyota, and other automakers, use of CNG helps overcome growing concerns about the impacts on their businesses of global oil depletion and the drive for U.S. energy independence.
 
The announcement was made Tuesday in Portland during a day-long Toyota Sustainable Mobility Conference at which one keynote speaker pointed out that of all the alternative fuels on the table today, natural gas is perhaps the easiest to put into widespread use, and also is the most plentiful.
 
"It lasts a lot longer than crude oil," noted oil industry consultant Peter Wells said of the global supply of natural gas.


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