Are you going to link to the "source" or just assume we'll believe you?I hope the source was accurate: the Trump EPA has ended the auto stop/start regulations.
Why would Ford voluntarily reduce the MPG of the Maverick?As far as I know there were no "regulations". It was voluntary.
All this means is your EPA number for MPG on next year's Maverick will be about 2 MPG lower.
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IF Ford decided to voluntarily drop the AS/S function since it would no longer help their CAFE numbers - then they would have to drop the MPG on the sticker.Why would Ford voluntarily reduce the MPG of the Maverick?
Remove the GPF? That would probably improve the mpg & reduce manufacturing costs too.
He supposedly removed the means of that to improve CAFE figures, for manufactures that wanted to voluntarily use it as a quick & dirty method to reach their figures.I hope the source was accurate: the Trump EPA has ended the auto stop/start regulations.
I thought it was still just called the EPA.I hope the source was accurate: the Trump EPA has ended the auto stop/start regulations.
Has anyone considered the cost of replacing the AGM battery more frequently? I know they last longer than a standard battery but all that restarting along with accessories running will prematurely run down that longer life span, and those batteries are more expensive.It will be interesting to see how automakers actually respond to loosened EPA / CAFE rules.
I consider myself to be an environmentalist that has an honest to god existential dread about how our civilization survives a rapidly changing climate, but I'm also a realist about what people will accept without revolting. There were some really dumb things being done to eek out very marginal fuel economy gains that unquestionably made vehicles less reliable. Loose piston rings, various cylinder deactivation technologies, wet timing belts, turbo everything, poorly implemented direct injection, start / stop, the list goes on. Emissions control is another layer on top of that.
Always wondered how much of that was over-regulation though, or automakers using it as a mild cover for planned obsolescence / less reliable cars so they could sell more cars, which is actually worse for the environment when you tabulate all the inputs into a new vehicle vs. keeping an older one on the road.