Light driving split between 3 vehicles.
I've added 6.3 gallons gasoline to my Escape PHEV with 2000 miles on it.
I've added 6.3 gallons gasoline to my Escape PHEV with 2000 miles on it.
Sponsored
Except for weight, range, and convenience.Electric vehicles are smoother, more powerful, quieter, cheaper to own over their lifetime and more reliable than gasoline powered cars. They are better in almost every metric imaginable.
Huh? I never intimated that at all. I drive a hybrid Mav. Maybe go back and read properly, without that huge chip on your shoulder.The Maveick is not a PHEV, you understand the difference, right?
The reason for the increased emissions is because owners are not plugging their PHEVs in at night, which the horribly written article never mentions.
Electric vehicles are smoother, more powerful, quieter, cheaper to own over their lifetime and more reliable than gasoline powered cars. They are better in almost every metric imaginable.
PHEVs are a stopgap compromise between purely gas and purely electric vehicles but eventually we'll be 100% electric for most smaller passenger travel.
I do find it comical that the OP posted this in the hybrid power train sub but doesn't understand that the Maverick is not a PHEV or electric vehicle. They just don't understand technology. Their lack of educstion is mildly amusing though, and shows why people have such a misconstrued idea on electric vehicles.
Ceramics make a huge difference now in the world of turbos. I really like the Jeep 2.0 Hurricane engine as it has a liquid cooled exhaust manifold which does wonders keeping the temps down in the turbo. BTW a side benefit of that is almost instant heat in the winter. I gotta have that turbo supplied low end torque!!Not a big fan of turbo engines. Makes things more complicated.It's a way to get the most out of a small engine. However it's the way of the world now. So far happy with my Mav ecoboost. I had an f150 3.5 ecoboost crappy 16mpg but that thing was pretty fast.
Severe climate like tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding downpours, drought, lakes drying up, famine in 3rd world countries that used to at least have subsistance farming, migration caused by crop failure. The world has always experienced this but surging population and demands on nature compound this.Just caught this article this morning, claiming that Toyotas in particular pollute almost as much as non-electrified vehicles when measured in real-world scenarios.
https://thedriven.io/2024/04/18/toy...emit-four-times-more-co2-than-company-claims/
"Smoother"? is that a technical term that I don't understand?Electric vehicles are smoother, more powerful, quieter, cheaper to own over their lifetime and more reliable than gasoline powered cars. They are better in almost every metric imaginable.
A past president of Green Peace has brought up exactly this. He's concerned the focus on O2 is misplaced and our solutions to it are harmful in other ways. Truthfully, I get nervous anytime an expert speaks on this subject (and just about every other subject) because if you look throughout history, experts have a poor track record of getting things right and have actually caused more harm than good. People often confuse a consensus with being right.Just caught this article this morning, claiming that Toyotas in particular pollute almost as much as non-electrified vehicles when measured in real-world scenarios.
https://thedriven.io/2024/04/18/toy...emit-four-times-more-co2-than-company-claims/
Electric vehicles are almost all about low-end torque. Real-world usage shows that most owners accelerate a lot more than gas vehicles as a result. As a direct result, they wear tires at 2-3x the rate of non-electric vehicles, and the low-rolling-resistance tires cost 2x as much to replace. What is more concerning is that almost half of the particles in the Pacific Gyre and similar pollution concentration points are from tires. The partial fix is pretty simple - build electric vehicles with much smaller motors. That would also allow for much smaller batteries, thereby solving another huge pollution problem with electric vehicles. Of course they would not sell as many then, since most electric car owners are acceleration freaks.Severe climate like tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding downpours, drought, lakes drying up, famine in 3rd world countries that used to at least have subsistance farming, migration caused by crop failure. The world has always experienced this but surging population and demands on nature compound this.
How much damage to the atmosphere are two wars doing? Crazy.
One constant as I look back is change. If people smarter than me determine that human activity contributes, I'll believe them. I don't drive an EV yet, but am close. I'll live with regen braking and limited range.
Oops, sorry, this is a Maverick forum. Meanwhile, I love my hybrid and look forward to an EV version that my solar panels can charge.
I never liked the idea of phev... I bet a lot of people with them never plug them in... I know I would forget or just get lazy and not plug it in. Should be ICE, Hybrid or EV.
Wow, go back and read the OP. Also, when you crack on someone about their education, you probably should write in proper grammar or risk some readers dismissing your comment. BTW: what idea do people have on electric vehicles that is misconstrued?The Maveick is not a PHEV, you understand the difference, right?
The reason for the increased emissions is because owners are not plugging their PHEVs in at night, which the horribly written article never mentions.
Electric vehicles are smoother, more powerful, quieter, cheaper to own over their lifetime and more reliable than gasoline powered cars. They are better in almost every metric imaginable.
PHEVs are a stopgap compromise between purely gas and purely electric vehicles but eventually we'll be 100% electric for most smaller passenger travel.
I do find it comical that the OP posted this in the hybrid power train sub but doesn't understand that the Maverick is not a PHEV or electric vehicle. They just don't understand technology. Their lack of educstion is mildly amusing though, and shows why people have such a misconstrued idea on electric vehicles.