Americans Drove Less in 2005
antifoidulus writes "CNN is reporting on a study that shows that not only did Americans buy more fuel efficient vehicles in 2005 (although sadly this trend reversed itself in the later half of 2006) but they also drove slightly less on average, according to the article, 'The drop in driving was small — the average American drove 13,657 miles (21,978.8 km) per year in 2005, down from 13,711 miles in 2004.' This is the first drop since the energy crisis of the late 70's. However, although SUV and mini-van sales have been falling, they still represent over half of the private vehicle sales in the United States."
I think it's disgusting that price is the only thing that people seem to think about when deciding whether to burn fuel.
Incidentally, I wouldn't put minivans in the same category as SUV's. Many SUV's get less than 20 mpg -- most minivans get above 25 mpg.
$20 every two week with my non hybrid car - back and forth to work
What state has a wide yellow license plate with no graphics? And what's the circular road sign with a red border?
'The drop in driving was small -- the average American drove 13,657 miles (21,978.8 km) per year in 2005, down from 13,711 miles in 2004.
This is what passes for a slashdot story these days? OMFG.
Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
That's a common Europe speed limit sign (80 kph?), big long yellow rear plates are found on Dutch cars for one, and the orange lorry has three country stickers on the left-hand side.
Less than 100 miles difference a year is insignificant.
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Based on the Edmunds 2006 buying guide for minivans, the average gas mileage they get is around 20/26. This is only slightly less than the 22/30 gas mileage that 4 door sedans get (the Civic throws this off, otherwise it'd be around 28). Obviously there are better vehicles for getting better gas mileage, but for people that want a little more space, have a family, or need to move larger objects once in a while, minivans aren't a bad option.
I personally drive a V8 crew cab pickup truck and even got a comment from a guy I used to work with about ruining the environment. Thing is, I work from home every day and as a result drive less than 4000 miles per year. I burn far less fuel than most hybrid owners, but still have to put up with their comments about what I choose to drive. You don't know people's driving habits, so it's really not fair to make generalizations about them.
Incidentally, while we didn't NEED a pickup truck, it did make sense for us since we're remodeling our house and landscaping during the summer. We tend to haul something at least a few times a month. Our only other options would be to rent a truck or borrow someone else's truck. It's also nice having a heavier vehicle during our Wisconsin winters.
Whenever vehicle stories come up on Slashdot, I read comments about how buying an SUV is all about showing off how much money you have, and that 99% of people don't need a truck. The fact is, anyone who owns a house and puts a decent amount of work into it or has a family with at least 2 kids will make use of the space in their vehicle. Hybrid SUV's are good alternatives, but the extra cost (initial + repairs) just turns people off to them right now.
You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
A drop from 13711 miles in 2004 to 13657 miles in 2005. Wow, congratulations, guys.
Since earlier this year I can't drive anymore for medical reasons. So I have to ride a bike five miles to work. A commute like that keeps you constantly whipped into shape. I highly recommend it. (Not having a medical problem that forces you to do it, that is, but just doing it.)
We have one car. It's a Prius. My wife just drives it to Whole Foods and the vet. Maybe a couple thousand miles every year.
I wonder how much of the 'reduction' was due to used car salesmen rewinding the odometers more than before...
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
CNN is reporting on a study that shows that not only did Americans buy more fuel efficient vehicles in 2005 (although sadly this trend reversed itself in the later half of 2006) but they also drove slightly less on average, according to the article
Yeah, well, it's easy to drive less when you don't have a job to go to.
Push Button, Receive Bacon
People are going out to less movies because of wait for it... PIRACY!!!
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
5 miles whips you into shape? I barely feel warmed up in 5 miles on a bike. I ride 25 miles to and from work a day, with about 700 feet in elevation change. And I don't feel that's enough to keep me in shape.
I didn't know CNN did reporting.
I know this is off topic...but screw the Karma. I just had a video pop-up ad appear on the slashdot homepage. If this keeps happening, I won't ever come back.
-Daniel
Ownyourphone.com. Custom ringtones, cheap and easy
The difference is so small that it's almost totally explained by 2004 being a leap year.
I agree wholeheartedly
I did the math and the difference is 0.3%. There's a word for that: statistical noise. It's a shame there's no one over at CNN with enough of a mathematical / scientific background to pick up on that and nix this story.
What's more is I don't trust the numbers themselves. Numbers like "13,657" and "13,711" imply a degree of precision, whereas "14 kilo-miles" (you guys should really switch to metric) does not. Given that there's no measurement error analysis I'm inclined to think these numbers are essentially the same.
In short, this is bullshit.
"Live as if you'll die tomorrow." Ridiculous. You could die later today.
Parent:
Yeah, well, it's easy to drive less when you don't have a job to go to. (With link to bureau of labor and statistics)
Umm... Did you even read the site you linked to? Here are the latest numbers right on the front page. Spectacular numbers, all of them. People most certainly have jobs to go to. Probably just that more are working from home and driving less when on vacation.
Unemployment Rate:
History 4.4% in Oct 2006
Change in Unemployment Level:
History -238,000 in Oct 2006
Change in Employment Level:
History +437,000 in Oct 2006
Change in Civilian Labor Force Level:
History +199,000 in Oct 2006
10 minutes working on a sig. What a waste.
Hi, Pot. I guess that was directed toward Kettle and I?
many of us see it, unfortunatly the majority of mouth breathers oh im sorry typical christian conservatives, have us arrested for being drugged up conspiracy nuts if we try and tell them this.
Umm... Did you even read the site you linked to?
Umm, did you even read the article you're responding to? We're talking about 2005, not 2006, Kreskin.
Push Button, Receive Bacon
This year, I drove more than any year before. Mostly because I am sick of the potemkin security at the airports. Although I had to go through the ID song-and-dance to get my driver's license, that was a mostly one-time thing. So when I drive I am not on anyone's list. I buy my gas with cash and pay for the motel rooms with cash too. The only thing that gets me are the plate cameras at the tollbooths, and the cell towers when I leave my phone on.
I'm not paranoid. I don't think anyone is out to get me. But driving is the closest thing we have to feasible anonymous travel nowadays -- you need id to board a plane, you even need id to buy a train-ticket - even though the people who 'check' the id wouldn't know a forgery unless it had "FAKE" stamped across it in big red letters. And don't even think about walking a couple of thousand miles, that just isn't going to happen.
Osama bin Laden has turned this country into a nation of cowards. There is not much I can do about it, but at least I still have the luxury of opting out of the herd of sheeple.
When information is power, privacy is freedom.
While the war in Iraq may have had something to do with a decrease in driving I think your post went extremely off topic. Of course your topic was modded Insightful almost instantly despite having nearly nothing to do with the article in discussion. Now if you had said that the war in Iraq was responsible for higher gas prices and not Katrina as the article seems to indicate which in turn decreased driving in the US I would have been fine with that. However, you decided to make this into a political discussion on Iraq. Kudos AC, kudos.
as far as I know, Slashdot does not have popups. They do have skyscraper banner ads and video adds embedded in the site. However, if you are getting annoying pop-up adds, you may want to check your site for ad-ware which is annoyingly known for such popups.
It is amazing that how news reporter are so illiterate when it comes to math and science. The figures they report indicates no conclusive reduction (change) in driving habits at all. When we measure a quantity there is always some error in that measurement. Driving habit is pretty much a random event when average over millions of people. Thus, a good approximation (I don't claim it to be the most accurate) of its associated error is 1/sqrt(x), and thus x +- x/sqrt(x) is a proper way for indicating the average x. In this specific case, it is 13600 +- ~110. Thus the change (~50) is smaller then a sigma away from the average. The proper way to report this would be: Americans don't care about the environment, and they have the money to burn the same amount of fossil fuel as they did last year.
2004 was a leap year, so it had more days, which makes the difference even less meaningful. Someone else caught it before I did, though.
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
not site :)
Why are people suprised? higher prices means less car use. I even modelled this here.
But US prices are still relatively low. To fill up a 50 litre car with gas in the UK costs around £50, translating to about $90.
I think you need to hit £1.50 a litre ($145 to fill up) before you get mass behaviour changes though.
DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
there is a way to avoid the ads on /.
/. (so maybe you have a trojan/spyware?) yet, but if they institute them, I won't fault OSDN-- bandwidth costs money.
it's called SUBSCRIBING. if you browse often, it might end up being $2/month, in my experience. if you browse occasionally, it will be less.
i don't like flashpopup ads either, nor have i seen any on
I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
Here are some direct links to back it up:
Chart 1-2. The unemployment rate is down from its most recent peak in June 2003 (PDF)
Chart 1-6. The percentage of the population that is employed has trended up since September 2003 (PDF)
10 minutes working on a sig. What a waste.
You're dumb enough to believe that Bush is to blame for everything whilst Cheney sits in the background controlling the puppet president.
.....most of them barely qualify as Christians. Conservatives yes, Christians.... barely.
You mad
The prevailing winds where I live tend to switch during the day so more often than not I get a tail wind both ways.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Americans are wasting a billion gallons of fuel per year by being so fat.
Lose some weight. It's good for you and it's good for the environment.
Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
Yep, I got one of those. Drive it everyday. 12MPG if I tread very lightly. Ain't no environmental law is going to stop me from exercising my right as a hot rodder. You want to stop me, you'll have to pry the steering wheel from my cold dead hands.
Thank you for insulting me and most of the people I know. I had no idea how completely stupid I was until I read your insightful post.
Want to make a logical argument beyond "Bush is evil, Americans are stupid, etc."? Oh, wait, that would involve thinking. Much easier to spout the same crap and insults over and over again. Way more effective too.
The vast majority of cities in North America (I'm including Canada here) are designed around driving. If we did a poll of /. users, I bet that the majority don't have a store within reasonable walking distance of their house that carries more than the basic essentials. (Sure you CAN walk to your local grocery store, but could you really do it all the time?) When you have to drive to buy bread and milk, you can't really not drive all the time.
More over, a house in suburbia is seen by enough people as sort of a birthright and enough people are just generally hostile to the idea of living in higher urban density areas even though it's really the only way to really reduce dependency on cars. People talk about transit which doesn't work well in suburbia because the spread out population means lots of buses that are mostly empty or else living too far from the bus routes for the bus to be useful. Metros and street cars are even less viable in spread out suburbs. Home delivery solves the problem to some degree, but you really can't organize cities around the idea of home delivery.
So basically, people HAVE to drive. Sure they can drive less, even much less, but there's sort of a basic minimum amount of driving that will always have to exist in a city that is designed around driving. Either the culture needs to change, and in some places that seems to be starting, or automobile efficiency needs to be greatly improved.
Or else we can just accept that at some point we're screwed.
This morning, as I was driving to work, I was thinking about REAL energy consumption: same distance can be driven with various energy (fuel) expenditure.
First, we burn fuel to accelerate and attain certain kinetic energy. This energy is wasted for good whenever I have to lower the speed (unless my car has regenerative braking system). So, keeping as low trip speed ceiling as possible saves a lot. Also, if your vehicle is loaded, acceleration to same speed and back will consume more fuel then when it is empty.
Second, drag force is directly proportional to air speed which is roughly equal to speed against the road. The energy lost conquering drag is this force multiplied by distance (perhaps mpg figures roughly represent that consumption, for some arbitrarily chosen, or actual test-average speed). That is another argument against high speed.
Third, going to up the gravitational potential well (up hill) will burn additional fuel, so if the road is not flat, you will have additional consumption. If your car (once again) has no regenerative brakes, this potential energy will be wasted. Perhaps going around the hill instead of cutting "short" over it would save fuel even though the mileage is much greater, but it has to be calculated for a given mass, relative altitude of the top of the path, drag, speed, etc.
Fourth, what all of us know very well, if we are in a traffic jam and low on fuel, we may as well run out of it even though it would had been enough otherwise. There are two reasons for that: first, there is a lot of acceleration/breaking involved (see above), and second, for low vehicle speed, powertrain is not efficient (it is designed to reach optimum at common trip speed interval) - that is another one for hybrids.
It should be emphasized that above little simple energy analysis is applicable on any surface vehicles (even muscles'-powered), not just ICE automobiles.
So, conclusion is that hybrid powertrain/regenerative braking vehicle design should be mandated by law(s), if automotive fuel consumption is wanted to be optimised on a national(global) level. Likewise, speed limiting, road reconstruction (rectification of elevation) and "smart" traffic lights could have positive effect in lowering overall fuel consumption.
As much cheaper aid for all vehicle types, an electronic device, a fuel consumption computer could be designed, that could calculate (predict) fuel consumption on the basis of input from sensors for vehicle (and load, overall) mass, road speed, airspeed and altitude (or elevation, so that weight force vector projection on vehicle speed vector direction could be calculated), present to the driver the diagram chart of consumption components during the trip and perhaps advise driver on changes in driving style that could save fuel better (i.e. "for additional 1 mpg, keep your speed under xx mph", or "inflate tires 0.1 bar"). With added GPS and map, it could also advise the most fuel-efficient route, on the memorized previous trips or purchased data packs for the area. Additionally, traffic jams information could be broadcast digitally to this devices over the radio, to complete the needed data. That would put drivers in tighter control over fuel consumption and allow them to make informed decisions while driving.
What I would like is, when I am low on fuel, to hit a switch to let car control my speed in order to get me home or to nearest gas station on the available fuel budget.
And apparently still twice as smart as the rest of the world (at least according to your "logic") since our gas prices are still about half the price of elsewhere. But then, it's pretty obvious you're either a troll, a moron, or still living in your Dad's basement (I figure your Mom got sick of your whiney, vitriolic, self-pitying ass long ago).
But boy oh boy - I just love a good ol' can o' tripe! I feel an overwhelming compulsion to point everyone I know to your brilliant words of wisdom and insightful analysis so we can all discuss its merits at length and really come to realize how incredibly stupid we are and how OH SO smart you are. Damn - I think we're just all gonna have to line up and suck your dick now... you're so cool.
Trust me. This is an inactive account. Regardless of what the
My question to the american public would be:
Why the need for those big engine?
The average sedan in the US seems to be a V6 or V8 engine car with a capacity of +4L. While the average european sedan would be a -2.4L car (in belgium for example taxes go way up for +2.4L cars). So if the average american would deside to set his pride and ego aside and buy a car that has a somewhat lighter engine fuel consumption would be reduced by a significant amount in contrast to the absurd numbers in the article.
And don't start with arguments like: I need my big engine SUV to haul around my home redecoration material. If you need that big a car for it, half of europe wouldn't be able to redecorate his/her home or garden. All excuses to drive a big car with a big engine. Granted, some people need it but certainly not the majority of the US public.
It's time to set aside your pride and think about the money you save and above all the environment and squashed pedestrians. Bigger is not always better.
You are right, today's SUV manufacturers have felt some of the pressure due to excessive mileage and there are already mid-size SUV's that have around 30mpg. I also wonder if the people who buy hybrids end up driving more, knowing that their car is so fuel efficient. In other words, an SUV owner knows how much gas his "tank" sucks and might not decide to go shopping to a mall on the other side of town, because he will have to get another a $30 tank of gas on the way back, and Prius owner instead would choose to go.
What do you think of the idea of tracking the amount of driving and increasing the tax accordingly? Would that be feasible? Such that someone who drives 30mi to work everyday might start to consider moving closer to his workplace or finding a job close to their home. This will seriously piss off a lot of people. But when New York starts to sink perhaps nobody would mind moving close to the city. This would seriously reshape the distribution of population long term and would probably create giant metropolitan areas isolated by desert and farmland. The extra money generated could go into development of greener fuels and the building of better transportation networks.
Three people in my familty bought new cars this year, all three were interested in checking out hybrids. Each waited months just to test drive a Prius; the dealer said they couldn't keep them on the lot for even a day, while the same SUVs stood there week after week. My parents and sister ended up actually FIGHTING over the only hybrid Camry they could get ahold of (both are Bush repubs by the way, they just thought Hybrids would be "cool" and cheaper in gas). It makes me wonder how many more people would be buying hybrids if the supply wasn't so tight, and how many people go for the SUV because the salesman can make them one heck of a deal on that Ford Behomoth that is so overstocked.
My SUV gets better mileage than most sedans. A lot of the near luxury sport sedans and coupes average BELOW 20mpg and yet hardly anyone points them out.
People harp about SUV driving people forget the big picture. At least for most of us one car is going to be a SUV or VAN. Someone has to have the "family" car - the hauler. Sure it would be nice to have an extra "commuter" vehicle but with prices today and insurance that isn't practical. So someone gets the SUV/MV etc. Your bound to see us solo in it, thats going to happen.
Outside of Civics and similar vehicles (hybrids don't count - I think they are a joke) that get 35+ easily on small gasoline engines I only see diesels as a viable alternative. I have seen Euro 300s with diesels that average 27mpg, not the 20 or so the gas versions get.
So next time you see that SUV plowing down the road and get your eco-fits going, realize that many of the near luxury sedans that are so very popular today are getting as bad if not worse mileage.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
A reduction in car travel doesn't necessarily mean a reduction in travel overall or a reduction in pollution.
Maybe people flew more last year?
Here as well. Unfortunately I tend to go into the wind whichever way I go.
Something like this?
(had to, this is my wallpaper at the moment)
Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
Actually, you're pretty much wrong... People who buy SUVs tend to say one of the reasons is "safety", but that doesn't show up on the stats. SUVs are really badly designed in a lot of ways (apparently the syndrome is something like: in order to keep SUVs from tending to flip over, they need wide wheel bases that push the wheels out sideways so that they tend to snag on the posts of guardrails, and hence flip over more easily....).
Minivans, on the other hand, may very well be "safer", I don't know what the stats show, but I've at least heard that they're better than SUVs.
(I'm politely ignoring your hedge "as long as they're driven properly". No one plans on "having an accident". Arguably, part of the problem with SUVs is psychological: people think they're invulnerable inside them, so they drive worse.)
And they don't mind you publicising that fact on the Internet? I'm British, but I would be horrified if someone published the fact that I'm a closet Blair (and, therefore, Bush) fanatic! I'd end up being killed!
"or has a family with at least 2 kids will make use of the space in their vehicle"
:-)
You need an SUV is you're going to have two kids? OMG! how did humanity survive up till now? How did my parents fit three of us in the back of a saloon car in the 70s? does that mean I was an abused child?
Sure if you've got an SUV then "you will make use of the space in the vehicle" but it doesn't mean you *need* it, it's still a luxury. On that stance if you bought a school bus you'd argue that you'd make use of the space in the bus to transport your kids. Doesn't mean you need every family needs a school bus. I agree with you though generalisations are bad. However my experience is people tend to really over-spec the vehicle they need, and sometimes for flimsy reasons. Just look at the kind of work Model T Fords got put to 80 years ago, check their technical specification, poorer than a modern micro-hatchback on most counts I'd guess.
This can't possibly be right. Try looking up "traffic evaporation" some time. Driving has an illusion of being "free" -- the roads aren't toll roads, gas prices are kept cheap -- yes, even now, no one thinks much about the per-trip risk of crashes: so most of the costs seem like sunk, fixed costs -- so people do a lot more of it than they might if they had to pay the actual costs of a trip on every trip.
If gas prices suddenly tripled, people would compensate (to some extent) by making fewer trips to the supermarket, go out to dinner less, order DVDs instead of drive to the google plex, and so on.
Yes, it would take some time for them to try to find work closer to home (or vice-versa), to bug their local government to fix public transport, to put in better bicycling facilities, and so on... but that's not the only ways to compensate.
He must not live in the San Francisco Bay area.
The rest of the country isn't quite there yet... give them a few months. By this time next year you're going to see amazing amounts of denial and/or denials on the subject. "Well, of course, I was never really one of those Bush supporters."
Bush is the new Nixon. For generations to come, Republicans will be saying "But he's not as bad as Dubya!"
Jolly joy, After reading all this... well, I can only say I had a great laugh at the "scientific data" produced.
/. article on Gates For President, I'm once more struck by the fact the USA really seems to be run by the most incompetent pricks I could ever imagine.
Not signing the Kyoto treaty, then making a big deal over a supposed drop in average driving per American, that is basically nothing but statistical noise.
The sad part is most of the sheeple there will watch the news and claim that they've done something for the environment. Big, red white and blue, prime American BULLSHIT.
I've had no special education in calculating these, but I do know such a small change over a year is just "noise" as mentioned in other posts.
However, after reading the
Even if every individual driver in the USA drives 500 miles less a year, the average amount of cars per household still raises every year, as well as the total amount of families using virtually nothing but cars.
As previously mentioned in this post, by someone I assume to be one of the few intelligent Americans out there, you Americans really need to rethink the entire organization of where and how you live and get around. I've lived all over central Europe in my younger days, and the last 5 years or so I've been living in Scandinavia, Finland.
Finland is known as the "little America" of Europe. Mostly because they have the same type of population spread. A few "cities" in the middle of nowhere, and one huge capitol city area that includes multiple communities that make their own decisions. Yet everywhere in Europe, public transportation is properly organized and implemented. In my 24 years of living in Europe, all over it really, I have yet to find any place in north or central Europe where I actually needed a car. I don't even have a drivers license. There's just never been a need for it.
If Americans would only organize their cities and suburbs properly, I believe that they to could very easily provide a public transportation service that eliminates the need to drive cars, almost totally, for every day purposes. I do realize however, every family should still have one car to go to the cabin in the mountains/woods if they have one. Or to visit family that lives in he next city or move or such.
In my opinion, with a bit, ok a LOT, of reorganizing, the USA could make it so that only delivery vans/trucks need to drive in the inner cities, and that all suburbs have a train or metrostation, from where daily commuting can take place. Take a lesson from your "parents", the European countries, and sign the damn kyoto treaty and reorganize. There is no other way as effective in reducing emissions and wasted fuel.
Fuel prices hurt the economy's bottom line.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
maybe people in the USA are lucky to have such ridiculously low gas prices. startled aren't you ?
...most people prefer vehicles that offer more mileage/ economy.
yeah. i bet.
In india, in most states, its about $4.50 a gallon, as compared to the *a somewhat lowly* $2.27 (http://www.gaspricewatch.com/new/)!!! thanks to the high state & central taxes - which forms about 40% of the gas price,
The following isn't an attempt to flame you, it's simply my own point of view. I don't regard a house in suburbia as a birth right, more as a necessity. Much as I would like to live relatively close to where I work, I would have to pay extortionate housing prices if I realized that ambition. I therefore bought an apartment that isn't even in the city suburbs but in a nearby township and I bought it because it had a low price-tag due to the distance it is from the city center and from the nearest mass transit access node. I ride an old mountain bike (which I fixed up and is in good nick but looks so ugly nobody has bothered to steal it so far) to the nearest station and ride a train to work. I do this as much to get a good dayly workout as I do it to save myself the not incosiderably costs of owning a car. I do agree with you that a family in Europe or N-America, living in the suburbs, needs at least one car. However, from my point of view, if I have to buy a car, the choice will be governed by fuel economy and low operating costs as much as anything else. If I ever get married I will buy some sort of fuel efficient 5 door hatchback for the wife and kids but I'll be damned if I buy a gas guzzling Mini-van and an SUV for myself to commute to work I'll stick with my bike. If I absolutely have to buy a second car for myself to commute to work I will buy some small fuel efficient car or a hybrid when they become affordable. I simply have a score of other things I'd like to spend my money on rather than automobile fuel bills.
Only to idiots, are orders laws.
-- Henning von Tresckow
The count of numbers of "cities" matters less than the percentage of population living in post-car cities or Real Places (as I tend to think of them). You're certainly correct that a lot of people have got themselves stuck in the 'burbs, but the percentage might only be as much as 50% or so, depending on where you draw the boundaries (e.g. a big chunk of the US population is supposed to be in the New York "tri-state" area, much of which has car-alternatives).
All right, now you're talking about *time-efficiency* which is different from capability. There's a peculiar illusion about car-usage by the way, where most people think it's a lot faster than it really is... e.g. a trip of a few miles inside of San Francisco takes about the same amount of time to drive as it does to bike it, once you add in all the time spent scoping for parking, sitting at lights, and so on...
Just as a thought experiment, try to imagine a practical alternative to driving to the supermarket. My claim would be that most people could do it with a bike *and* a bike-trailer.
Well, you see, it's rumored that there are some non-white people in them there satantic cities. (I note with some grim amusement, a certain panic afflicting surbubia over the thought of things like houses packed full of salvadorean immigrants -- white flight, denied!).
It's a tough one all right. Anyone who looks at the problem realizes that the 'burbs are fucked by their zoning regulations, but you can't convince the 'burbians of that. At least not yet.
Note though, that in general, public transit gets better the more people who are using it: there's a virtuous circle, it's easier to justify more buses, and more people use them, because there are more of them, and you don't have to wait as long, etc. It would not seem like that should be such an insanely difficult problem to crack... though admittedly I would not say it has been, in any 'burb that I'm familiar with.
Tell that to Manhatten.
Nah, they think they have to drive. I would claim that anyone who's sufficiently motivated can figure out ways to radically reduce or eliminate car driving from their lives (I'm down to a half-interest in a car that I hardly ever drive, myself). It might involve some mental flexibility to realize that if you pay more in rent and less in car payments your life will be better (more physical and social activity), but I don't think it's impossible for folks to get to that point.
Actually, improving car mileage doesn't really do all that much for us. Americans obssess about the pollution coming out of car
No, because that would be basically impossible without massive and expensive privacy invasion by the government (mandatory GPS tracking, anyone?) And besides, what's the advantage, emissions-wise? With regard to road maintenance, etc. well that is called a toll road.
Comparitively, tax on gas is simple and as an added benefit encourages the development of vehicles with better fuel economy. Compare the sort of vehicles generally driven in Europe (with high gas tax) to those in the US. Your average car in Europe will have far better MPG figures. Throw in some sort of tax break at the point of purchase linked to low emissions and that's not a bad system.
In the US, only Mercedes is trying to get educate the crowds in the advantages of Diesel fuel. In Europe, Diesel is actually popular, but in the US there is a stereotype that Diesel means slow and sluggish. I've recently visited the autos.yahoo.com website and I was completely baffled by the comments over there. Everyone seems to be surprised by the great fuel economy that the Mercedes-Benz 320 CDI offers and also the incredible acceleration on a highway. In Europe this would be taken for granted.
Let's take another car right now: the Honda Accord. In Europe it also has a Diesel option with the following fuel economy values: Hwy-53 mpg, City-33 mpg. It delivers 140 bhp with an immense torque of 340nm and a maximum speed (in the manual) of 136 mph. Should be taken into consideration that the values for Hwy in Europe are generally taken at a speed of 80mph, which is the recommended or imposed maximum speed on highways in most of Europe. Considering that in the US it ranges between 65 and 75, the values could be better for highway. The same applies for city values. European cities tend to be a lot more crowded and the traffic to be a lot worst than that of a US city (San Francisco does resemble an European city somewhat due to it's smaller streets and it's hills).
Our car is a Renault Megane (Renault is the "other half" of the Renault-Nissan corp.). It has a *1.5*L diesel Engine (3 year old engine) that delivers 110 bhp with an imense torque. It's mpg at 100mph on a hwy is 42 as reported by the on-board computer. That gives-it a 600+ miles range on one diesel fuel fill (15 gallons) at a higher than legal speed. If you only drive legally on hwy (less than 80mph), you could actually cross Europe on one or two fills.
Even more surprising is that the engines that are found in the US have worst performance in any given aspect than the European ones for the same volume. In Europe, for a 2L Gas Engine you can get 200 bhp at some manufacturers.
UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that would also stop you from doing clever ones.
No, no no, the public ethos of the moment is wage pressure; you can find a job, it just doesn't pay enough to live on. Never mind the abandonment of Walmart and continuing strength in housing, this country is clearly poor, and getting poorer.
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
I thought that just more americans became to fat to fit in a car :-P
You already register your car every year with the state I assume? Not sure if this is true in all states but it is in most.
Anyway, it's not too difficult. Every year when you register your car, they check the odometer reading, compared to last years reading you pay some amount.
It's not rocket science.
gas prices suck even thow i liked my old ford aerostar mini van witch btw for its age was in perfect shape it wasent bad on gas it had a small v6 but i drive a good distance to work and i got sick of droping 50 bucks every 2 weeks on gas for it. i now own a old s-10 pickup with the small 4 banger engion and im saving 20 bucks in gas every 2 weeks probly more if i due a tune-up on it. im jus a example that we like are large suvs/vans we simply cant aford to drive them anymore and sell them for smaller cars. so yea privet sales of suvs would go up and new sales will fall down but also privet sales of small cars also fall and new small car sales raise.
Parent is a fraud: First you tell us to ride a bicicle while you have been driving until you could no more because of your condition. Big lover of the environment are you. Second, your wife has a prius and you babble some nonsense about driving 'a couple thousand miles a year'. For that mileage it would have been much wiser to buy a normal car. A Prius is more expensive than a normal car and you aren't paying it off. Way to go, dude.
More cheap gas for me and my SUV. :-D
Research shows that 67% of those who use the term "research shows", are just making shit up.
Um, I think I may be responsible for these new statistics. About 18 months ago, my daughter made some remark about the extra few pounds I've put on in the last couple of years and I pulled out my beautiful old road bike and started riding the 25km to work every day.
I live in Chicago, and the weather here can sometimes be inhospitable to cycling, but I decided I was going to ride every day if possible. I didn't realize the enormous benefits I'd reap. Yeah, I lost the few pounds and got into better shape, and my health has improved. I smoke a lot less (I don't smoke in the house, so my car was an ashtray). I tried smoking and cycling for a while, but I caught my reflection in a store window and realized I looked stupider than usual with a cigarette hanging out of my mouth, pedaling along.
And yeah, I've saved a ton of cash. We have another vehicle my wife uses, so I went ahead and sold my car. I've bought a new Core 2 Duo based Digital Audio Workstation and midi keyboard with just a little of what I saved from the car, gas, maintenance and insurance.
But the real benefit was the 90 minutes (45 each way) that I spend on the bike instead of in traffic every day. For that hour and a half every day I'm like a child, blasting Stooges or Buzzcocks or Muddy Waters or whatever in my earbuds and checking out what's actually going on in my city. Dodging SUVs and not thinking about much of anything.
I spent a few hundred on really warm and dry clothes and stuff, and the weather really doesn't bother me at all any more. Today it's 26 degrees F and freezing rain, and in a few minutes (it's 6:30am here) I'll be on the road, comfortable under my North Face shell, rocking out to some Clash or whatever, singing at the top of my lungs.
It's been a revelation. I'm probably a little less than at the middle of my lifespan (unless I get hit by a bus on Ashland Avenue this morning) and giving up the car for the bike has been one of the greatest things that has ever happened to me.
You are welcome on my lawn.
"CNN is reporting on a study that shows that not only did Americans buy more fuel efficient vehicles in 2005 (although sadly this trend reversed itself in the later half of 2006)"
Where is this number coming from? The only mention in the article of 2006 is
which seems to indicate that the trend continued (at least until 3 months ago).Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
So they calculate that Americans are driving, on average, 50 miles less in a given year... in a "trend" that did not actually last a full year. Did I get that right? And from this they are drawing a conclusion? This is so typical of CNN, which is probably why I only get their drivel when I accidentally click in to it from another site.
1: Engines of US made cars and trucks not as efficient as those in Europe.
A: Our engines have more smog controls.
2: US cars have larger engines.
A: We also have larger SUV's and trucks. Do we need them to haul stuff for our projects?
Our houses are also larger than those in Europe. Our city's are usually not as crowded as yours
so we do have more room and are spread out more.
Having said that.....
I wish we'd bring back the gas-guzzler tax in spades. Make it a graduated tax starting at
less than 30mpg highway and adding on as gas milage got worse. Below 20mpg highway and it would
double or triple the cost of the car/truck. Have to be carefull about this though. Large vans used for car pooling should be treated different because when they are full the passanger mile per gallon is better than a car with only the driver. Diesel fueled vechiles should have to
be judged on a higher mpg as they usually get higher mpg.
SUV's are useful, but to drive 20 miles each way a day to work by yourself in a Ford 'Explosion'
SUV ought to be a capital crime.
Me? My 5 year old Accord gets about 30mph highway. Maybe I'll be replacing it with another
Accord or a Civic when it expires. No hybrids though. A hybrid does NOT get much better highway milage than a stright gas car. (not worth the extra cost to buy and maintain) City driving it makes a big difference though.
..(I am sure you will correct me even if I am right, but anyway)..
Isn't the fact that the milage went down an indication of a real decrease, despite the sceptics, since prior to this, milage has been steadily climbing.
Like a business, wherein even 0% growth is a bad thing, so negative growth is truely terrible; except in this case the fact the growth was negative is a 'good thing'.
(I'm politely ignoring your hedge "as long as they're driven properly". No one plans on "having an accident". Arguably, part of the problem with SUVs is psychological: people think they're invulnerable inside them, so they drive worse.)
Good response.It is not because Americans were more economically or environmentally conscious. It is because they bought GPS navigation systems and took better routes.
The masses are the crack whores of religion.
Minivan? My 2001 Chevy Ventura minivan gets 23 city 30 highway actual. Better than my Malibu, so stick it!
...what year is it again?
You obviously don't know the definition of wheelbase. FYI, it's the distance betweem the centerlines of the front and rear axles.
Also, your contention that vehicles flip over due to snagging on guard rails makes no sense. Can you point to any online sources that support your assumption?
Self awareness - try it!
"No - I don't walk all the time, most of the time I ride a bicycle, a fun, efficient & healthy way of getting about. And on my bike I get to work faster than if I went by car, I park in no time and for free, I get to ride along dinky little country tracks far away from car fumes..."
Just try doing that with one arm in a sling. Harder than you think especially when you live in a city that's not bicycle friendly.
Yeah, but all of those people that were hired in October to help with the Christmas season will be back on the street come January 1st.
What?
About the design bit...
In case of the evolution of Belgium, you are absolutely right. It's a very old area in Europe, it's been inhabited for thousands of years, and is in the heartland of where the industrial revolution began. It's always been a major population center, Belgium as a nation has always been a democracy. We've always had more political parties, so there is a background of having a social and green concerns properly addressed. That makes it's evolution quite different from America.
Finland on the other hand went from a farm and forester type of society straight into the modern society, just as the US has. It had, especially in the beginning, little or no industry anywhere but in he cities, which are pretty far apart.
They chosen very smart people in my opinion to run and plan the public transportation. In the Helsinki area for example, trains go from the center to the urban areas as well as long distance to far cities. From every trainstop, there is also a bus transfer center. A place where virtually all buses in the area go through. This allows a very good coverage by the combination bus and train. In the inner city area trams, metro and buses have their own lanes during normal business hours. This really speeds up the speed of public transportation vs taking a car. Of course you need to enforce the trafic law, but what's one or 2 camera's or cops on a city's budget.
The public transportation here works like clockwork. I've virtually never seen a bus more then 3 minutes early or late. Most of Helsinki is surely suburbs. Only 2 train stops are actually in the city area, the suburbs start beyond that.
What you as a private citizen could do, in my opinion, is to find out what your local city elected person in charge of transportation has in mind for your city, and suggest improvements where you think they've gone really wrong. If they are negative about your suggestions, go to the local paper, they should be interested in running any story where a member of the local electorate can be put in bad light.
Besides that I cannot think of anything you could immediately do. Still, I've lived in a city most of my life exactly for the reason that everything is close by. For me that's surely worth the "trade off" in loss of backyard or anything like that. It might be different for you though. But that's just me. Rather have everything close.
Averaged over such a huge statistical sample it certainly is not. What you are seeing is a reduction in discretionary driving because of high gas prices or the market working.
One arbitrary length measure is as good as another, 1/10,000,000th of the arc distance from pole to equator or the length of King Henry I's foot. In America when we find something useful we don't feel the need to change gratuitously.
an ill wind that blows no good
Indeed... best comment I've seen today. Someone with mod points please make up for the fact that the rest of the mods are on crack... GP deserves an Insightful for the last line alone.
Windows isn't the answer... it's the question. NO is the answer!
People move away from the city to raise a family. Most people can't afford to raise children in or just outside the city while ensuring they grow up in a safe environment. Until you can make American cities child friendly (good luck), it's not going to work.
Sorry dear old cap, but I honestly don't count the UK or Ireland as part of Central Europe.
Especially not after the "Splendid Isolation" policy the UK has had in the not to distant past. I've been in the UK before, but only in London, southeast England and South Wales. That was quite a while ago, about 10 years, except the London bit, so I don't think my impression from way back then are anything to go on.
I had absolutely no issues with getting around in the London Area by public though. It was the same as most other decently sized cities in my opinion. Not especially good, but surely not to bad either.
20 miles, let's make it 30 km, I know it's a bit further but that's not important. 30km isn't to bad. I've had to travel a lot further for job, about 45km in each direction, took me an hour a day to get there, and another hour,hour and a half sometimes due to traffic. I didn't really have to much problems with it, because I could do a lot of my work in the train or bus on the way to work.
Your problem however, seems to stem more from bad planning on the side of your elected politicians to pay proper attention to the public transport. I'm most surely not an expert on UK politics and can therefore give no real constructive comments on how to solve it. You just might be "fudged" and have to suffer the situation.
I do know however, that I've always lived in cities because I could get anywhere easily, fast and to have everything I crave at my fingertips. The lights, the sounds, city life has always been good to me.
In the 1970s, car seats were small and compact. In the 1970s, pre FMLA, there was no generally accepted 3 month maternity leave, so normally really small kids had their mother at home.
In the 1970s, airbags didn't make it dangeous for kids under a certain age/weight to right in the front seat.
In the 1970s, carseats could ride in the front OR back... now it is back only, and facing backwards with little kids.
In the 1970s, putting a carseat in the back-middle didn't block the two seats on the side, now it will.
The fact is, the car manufacturers and child safety manufacturers have adapted to A) a change in the legal requirements, B) more litigation, causing car seats to be slightly safer, but 85% of them are installed incorrectly, so they are on average less safe for the kids, but safer from law suits, C) adapt to a decrease in family size.
In the 1970s, 3 kids was normal. In the 1980s and 1990s, 2 kids was normal. Although family sizes are inching back up, anyone with 3 or 4 children will struggle with current cars unless getting a mini-van.
Alex
The following post has little real direction. More my random thoughts than anything organized.
:)
/not/ a luxury item here. Before you ask, no, front wheel drive is not sufficient to meet all conditions. Having traction on that second axle has helped me out more times than I can count, and I spend 95+% of my time in commuter traffic.
:) )
:) For another, I love to spend time in the woods, hiking, hunting, and fishing. Having an old 4x4 1/2 ton pickup means that I can get back into the brush a ways while towing a trailer or boat without worrying about it getting scratched up, also knowing that I can get myself back out again. This truck also acts as the family hauler for everything from trips to Goodwill to moving my sisters to you name it.
;)
:( Anyone know of something something like my dream vehicle in the works from anyone?
People here on Slashdot slam SUVs and minivans out of hand, which I find unfortunate. I'll grant you that there are plenty of people who buy these larger vehicles who really don't need one. There are places and times when they are absolutely an appropriate choice, though. For example, ever see a soccer mom trying to jam 5 or 6 kids into a Honda Civic after practice?
Someone else also commented that people with varied and complex lifestyles may choose these vehicles in order to meet all of their needs with a single vehicle. Many families (like mine, for example) might have one smaller and one larger vehicle.
I don't pretend to speak for everyone in the US, but I think I can shed some light on why SUVs are popular in my neck of the woods. I live in Minnesota, where we have rotten driving conditions seven months a year. 4x4s are most definitely
Personally, I don't own an SUV. I own a ten year old 4x4 Ford 1/2 ton extended cab pickup with the small gasoline V8 and 5 speed manual transmission. I bought it used back in '96. It had been on the road for 6 months and already had 12,000 miles on it. The original owner couldn't keep up the payments for some reason.
It now has nearly 235,000 miles on it. I've gone through one transmission replacement, but I'm still on the original engine and clutch. (What can I say? Dad taught me how to shift by paraphrasing that old TV show, _Kung_Fu_: "You must drive as if shifting on rice paper. You have learned how to do it well when the paper is not torn."
Why do I drive it? Well, for one it's been paid off for nearly 7 years.
Granted, with the number of miles that are on it I'll need to think about getting it replaced in a couple of years. About that time it'll have close to 300,000 miles on the engine, after all. I think I'll have gotten my money's worth out of it.
My dream replacement vehicle would be another 1/2 ton extended cab pickup or 1/2 ton SUV with a manual transmission. My engine choice would either be diesel or a hybrid for the improved mileage. Unfortunately, hardly anyone seems to know how to drive stick shifts any longer so none of the big 3 even offer a manual in a 1/2 ton anymore. Also, in this country diesels aren't being offered in anything smaller than a 3/4 ton pickup and hybrids are only now being offered in 1/4 ton SUVs.
It's just that the SUVs got so big that there's less distance from point A to point B.
Cheers!
Careful - on such a high horse you could easily fall and break your neck.
Honestly, 20mpg vs 25mpg - I sincerely hope you were being sarcastic.
I'm a 2000 man.
The hottest trend now is to have the best of both worlds, a hybrid drivetrain system with the space and style that sells well because it fits a need. SUVs are just the natural outgrowth of the old family stationwagon, just more headroom basically and a little more needed interior space and better towing capacity as well when it is needed. The LA auto show is showcasing quite a few hybrid SUVs. They have the actual space and size to pull off "plug in" advancements as well, once they get battery tech down better. GM just went on the record saying they *would* start offering them as soon as possible in fact. In the meantime they and ford and a few foreign manufacturers all have hybid SUVs now that get pretty fair mileage.
Very small cars are just not the solution for everyone. Once you stop being a single person living in some high rise apartment and move to a stand alone home and have a family, little teeny cars are the wasteful luxury, not the necessity.
Actually hybrids are not cheaper in any way. they get marginally better gas mileage for the same car class.
Scion Xa is your BEST buy right now for fuel to cost ratio. they get the best gas mileage for their cost and end up having a far lower TCO than anything else. A toyota prius costs enough more to pay for your fule in the Scion for nearly 1/2 the life of the car. Now if you want to be a yuppie that tries to brag, get the hybrid. but they have no real value in saving money.
Alas, most americans are either too stupid or too busy trying to impress others with their car to make an educated and well thought out car purchase decision.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
I learned to drive in MN and have spent the majority of my life there or in Iowa *shudder*... I don't agree that SUV's are a good thing in winter conditions, and I'm not sure why you'd argue that they are, given that you don't drive one either. ;)
I've driven FWD, RWD and 4WD vehicles in snow, ice and heavy rain, and in all honesty, I consider an SUV a liability -- your traction might improve IF you know how to drive. Most people don't -- that's why they buy SUV's. They mash the brake or the gas; 4WD won't help you there, and the extra weight of an SUV means more momentum that most people don't know how to handle.
I believe RWD is the best way to go in snow, since you're less likely to lose traction on your directional wheels, a manual transmission gives you the best ability to get your traction back by dropping the clutch and easing back into gear, and a small sedan or large coupe is the easiest way to keep winter driving as stress-free as possible.
While I don't agree with everything you said, I think your point about people in SUVs having a false sense of invincibility is true. And when it snows, I seem to see a lot more SUVs on the side of the road then anything else. It seems like a lot of people get them around here because "they're good in the snow." They offer an advantage because of their weight and 4WD but some people seem to buy them thinking that they can now do 70 on the interstate in a blizzard. And then they can't.
"However, although SUV and mini-van sales have been falling, they still represent over half of the private vehicle sales in the United States."
And? Do you have some point other then "their bad bacause everyone says there bad?"
ass.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Yesterday I found that I could easily fit 8 large bags of mulch in my Prius with room for more. What's that about hybrids being too small?
So the drop was by less than half of 1%. That number would be helpful in the description ... So I guess what's interesting is not the amount of the drop (infinitesimal) but the fact that it dropped at all, instead of rising.
Global warming is neither science, nor politics. It is a religion.
Ahh, but they got a nice tax break for buying a hybrid, making it the same price as the regular Camry (their last 3 cars), and it does get better milage. So it was cheaper, as well as cooler.
There's also the problem of people getting larger and requiring more space per person.
Thank god these new larger vehicles have cup holders large enough for a 300 calorie drink so you can have your hands free to eat your 600 calorie sandwich and 300 calorie fries while rushing from sitting at one place to another.
...because they've moved all those thirsty hummers off to Iraq/etc.
Max.
>I always enjoying watching those (Sydney) north-shorers spending $100+ filling up their X5s. It's nearly as entertaining as watching them gets the kids out of the car to guide them into the parking space.
bullshit. BMW X5s have parking sensors on the front/rear/side. You dont even have to look, just listen to the beeping to let you know how close you are to other cars when parking.
I wouldn't mind seeing a few asshole SUV drivers crushed by a big rig. Quite a few men and women have tried to push my Focus arround while driving their SUVs, whether due to sheer ignorance or impotent rage, I cannot say.
Some day i'm gonna follow those fuckers to a parking lot and do to them with my hands what they did to me with their two-ton douche-mobile.
Blar.
Minivans, on the other hand, may very well be "safer", I don't know what the stats show, but I've at least heard that they're better than SUVs.
They may be less likely to roll over, but they are generally pretty unsafe in a single car accident, head on, or front corner collision, as those type of accidents often result in broken legs due to the proximity of the legs in relation to the engine and front of car.
If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
Besides being tolerable as gas milage, minivans actually get filled with kids.
Pickups do not haul manure. They haul air and a driver, not counting the idiots who fill the back with kids! The milage is terrible, as is the safety. Basically, a pickup is an SUV without the rear upper portion.
As a general comment, the arguably stupid part of the fixation on SUVs is that if everyone stopped driving them tomorrow and drove a Prius instead, it would have a negligible impact on oil consumption in the US. That fixation is fundamentally misplaced.
I always love comments like these. Everyone on both sides of the argument will almost always use the Prius as the counterexample for an SUV.
Makes me grin every time. My Prius is, in the eyes of the public, the exact opposite of an SUV. Makes driving one that much more satisfying.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
I'm glad you used OR rather than XOR. OR is much more appropriate in this case.
Incidentally, while we didn't NEED a pickup truck, it did make sense for us since we're remodeling our house and landscaping during the summer.
I just finished a 1000 sq. ft. basement using only a Honda Civic. I needed exactly one delivery from the hardware store to drop off the lumber and drywall. Why load the stuff into a truck yourself, when you can have somebody else drop it off with a forklift? And why pay for the truck all the time when it's only needed once or twice per large construction project?
A few times I needed a couple more boards when I fudged a cut or underestimated quantities-- but 8-foot lumber fits in a 2-door '01 Civic with the trunk closed, and 12-foot can stick out the back in a pinch.
For me to need a truck, I'd have to be engaged in a project of that size every week or two before it became a justified expense.
Asshole drivers like to buy huge intimidating vehicles, so the accident stats for those vehicles look bad.
If asshole drivers took a liking for minivans, for sure the minivan would be most dangerous.
The "safe" vehicles are: priced out of range of most young drivers, uncool, practical... like a luxury minivan.
I'm a long time lurker that can't be bothered to create an account ATM, but I wanted to post a reply anyway so I guess I'll play the "Anonymous Coward" role this time. ;)
;)
;)
I've seen this topic come up a lot in the last few years and it bothers me when I read some of the comments made about us Americans from people that do not fully understand the situation over here. It's not just you UK and Euro guys that do it ether, a lot of city folk over here in the good old USA are quick to say the same things.
So allow me to explain our situation (our begin my family and myself);
Most of my father's side of the family lives on 180 archers of farm land which has been passed down through the family over the years. When I was a boy my great grandfather owned it all, he passed it on to my great grand mother, and when she passed away it got split up between my grandparents, great uncles, uncle, and my father. We are by no means 'farm people', we no longer grow tobacco or corn....we mainly just allow our cows to roam the land and let the grass in the fields grow up in the summer so we can bail the hay and sell it to local people that keep horses. In other words we all have jobs in a near by town/city, aside from some of us who retired.
Our farm is located about 5 miles west of a small town (it's small but the largest in the county) however just about everything is located on the east side of the town, so you're looking at about 10 miles both ways at least just to get anything. That includes fast food, groceries, smokes, gas...like I said everything and anything. Begin such a small town there is not much to do aside from riding around in your car. So if I want to go out with some friends, or take a girl out on a date I'll have to drive about 45 minutes (at highway (60mph) speed) south to get to the nearest city.
Obvouisly just driving costs me more cash then I'd like to spend, even with the 'cheap' gas prices that I hear us American's enjoy. Lemme tell you I sure wish it was still $1.12 or less like it was when I was a kid.
My family owns an SUV, and we use it for all sorts of stuff. We haul a boat to the lake in the summer with it, my dad pulls his motorcycle with it when needed. If it wasn't for the SUV we wouldn't have a good 4WD for pulling people out of mud holes (which happens often around here, we aren't shy about putting our cars in the mud). We got our SUV second hand back in 1995 I think, it's a 1989 Chevy...
We also own three 4 wheelers for getting around the farm (and a bit of fun of course!). 4 wheelers are great for people that work a portion of land. Why deal with all the crap that goes a long with caring for horses when you can just fill a few 5 gallon cans up at the pump and be set for two weeks?
Then there are the tractors that are mainly a hold over from when we worked the land for tobacco. They still get a good work out twice a year, and they come in handy for hauling stuff around the farm. The Tractors are just better for certain things, and there are a lot of places it can go where a regular 4WD truck/suv would get stuck.
My daily driver is a Mercury Grand Marquis, 1990 model, it's a car that never heard of aerodynamics and has a 302 5.0L under the hood. I did not buy this car nor did I want it at first, it was given to me, and until a time comes along when I can justly investing in a new car I plan on looking for something better on gas. I'll probably drive what I have now until it breaks down though, just because it's easier for me to pay a little extra everyday instead of pulling a a third of my savings out of the bank. Besides I like my car! It rides great and when everyone wants to go somewhere I'm the only one with a car large enough to haul them all around. I figure the extra money I spend on gas is worth begin able to enjoy that ride and begin able to carry around 6 ladies at once if I happen to get very lucky one of these days.
I think a l
This was a 15-month project done in my spare time. Just becase I got a stack of stuff delivered doesn't mean the project has to be done immediately. It helps to sit down with your floor plan for an hour and walk through your build order to prevent having to move the pile at a later date. (ie, don't stack your stuff where you're going to frame a new wall.) The pile of material was 4x8, and about five feet tall. Lumber on top, then drywall, then subfloor-- and build in that order.
But it's not rocket science, and it saved me an immense amount of time and effort. If, like us, your hardware store charges $50 for a delivery-- I'd be willing to bet you can afford a couple of those a month based *solely* on the monthly car payment difference between a V8 pickup and a Civic.
The beauty of it is that I was able to take advantage of short circuiting early into the evaluation...
Trust me. This is an inactive account. Regardless of what the
I wish I could mod this up. The parent obviously pulled the guardrail assumption out of his ass. I have a Ford Bronco that I take on the beach during summer months, or in the snow during the winter (I have a Nissan that I use as a daily driver). During the summer months, I would rather camp out on the beach on the north side of the island (a state park accessible only with 4wd) instead of being cramped up in a motel room on the south side. During the snow season, I drive the Bronco because with the added weight, 4wd, and mud-terrain tires (tires are the most important thing in driving in the snow; most people don't realize this because the only experience they have in an SUV is driving improperly inflated stock tires, hence all the 4wd vehicles you see in the ditch).
Now, here's a case where my SUV was safer than driving in a car. On the way back from the beach last summer, I was driving down a long, dark two lane highway, enclosed by the swamp and woods, when I hit a deer. When I hit the deer, it actually went underneath the front bumper, and I ran over it. Quite shaken, I pulled to the side of the road and called the police. When the officer arrived, he told me that I was lucky that I was driving something that sat high enough where the deer wouldn't hit the hood. In small cars, he said, the deer go through the windshield, and told me that there had been two fatalities in the past month on that stretch of highway due to deer. Now whenever my wife goes on a long trip to see her family, I make her take the Bronco, just out of safety concerns.
This is obviously a rare case event, but even the rarest events have to happen to someone; luckily for me, I didn't get hurt. Even if you don't believe this story (and I'm not expecting you to after all, this is Slashdot), at least admit that it carries more weight than the "SUV flipping over because they are too wide and trip on guardrails" claim.
I wish I had mod points
4 wheel drive can help one get moving in snow but it does nothing to help one stop. What was that physics thing about a body in motion? I still think a winter drive course should be set up and made a mandatory part of one's road test. That and backing up. In places where snow and ice are a reality, people should know that they can drive in it. Putting all these new things in cars to make them safer is leading to more and more dangerous drivers. I know a few people who think that with anti-lock breaks they can drive as fast as they want to and stop in 1-20 feet. I am not kidding. And now the auto parking car? Give me a break, if you can't park your car in that spot... look for another spot.
Do I have a SUV, yes and no. It is 2 door, it does have 4 wheel drive but it is smaller than the mini vans that would be able to haul the same things. I wanted a vehicle that I could put the doors and sheetrock in (I was fixing up my house at the time) and also be able to haul the boat, jet skies that I don't own but I usually wind up towing when I visit the people who do own them. The house I lived in had a single car garage. It was a car port that was walled off to make a garage. The little SUV fit inside it. The full size SUVs don't too tall and usually too wide. All but the really tiny minivans were too tall. I test drive 8, took them home to see and all were too tall. I park my car in all but the sub-compact parking spots. I do call it a car rather than a truck. IT is higher than most cars, but I drive it like a car. Not a sports car. If you can drive your regular car around at 100+ mph and take sharp turns more power to you. I do not do that. I drive slower in the snow and rain. I get passed all the time in the snow but I get to where I am going, safely.
I have a friend with a land rover who was always saying he could go faster than everyone else in the snow. He did that until we did a little test. We went to a big open parking lot when it snowed. Took each car to 40 mph then stood on the break petal. Guess which car stopped first? My little SUV stopped in ¼ the distance then his land rover did. And his land rover was newer then my car. Then he rolled it on a jug handle a few days later the new car was a smaller SUV.
Yes my gas mileage sucks, I get 19 around town and 24 on the highway. And I tow a bunch of stuff without a problem. A pickup truck was not an option, I don't want the stuff I put in the back out in the elements.
How does a $3000 tax break that goes away this year offset the $18,000 price difference? What kind of math are you using?
While I'm more or less sympathetic with what you're saying: I have a Subaru station wagon that gets about 30 mpg, handles beautifully on twisty icy roads, and I can put four bicycles or a spare Subaru engine block in the back. I often use it to carry 10' lumber or ladders, with the trunk lid closed. Plus, I spent another $400 and got a 4'x8' trailer, so when I need to bring home 20 sheets of 4'x8' plywood or drywall, it's no problem, and the rest of the year, I'm still getting 30 mpg.
Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
No, but vectorially speaking, the parent poster *will* have a headwind both ways unless there's an unusual wind pattern there. Canyon winds sometimes flow downstream in the morning and upstream in the evening, so if you're lucky you can get a tailwind both directions.
Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
Until the this last year, when allowable diesel sulfer content was decreased, it wasn't possible to get a diesel-burning car that passed emmisions tests in many cities, most notably in California. So of course there weren't many manufacturers that were pushing diesel - half the US market was shut off to them.
Even so, mercedes isn't the only company that is trying to change perceptions (in fact I didn't even know they sold diesel cars). The VW TurboDiesels are the first cars I think of when I think of diesel. And from talking to those dealers, the biggest misconceptions they have to counter is not performance, but the idea that diesels are loud, smelly, and don't work well in cold weather.
just a theory, but you figure the gas prices were ramping up slowly, but they totally spiked post-Katrina. there was still 1/3 of 2005 left, but the gas prices did not really drop when the oil processing plants were back online. people seem to have accepted that the days of $1/gallon gas are gone and making adjustments to their lives. maybe it's just people i know, or the ones that talk about it, but i know people have started to drive less. if they drive, they are more likely to carpool. in a way it's great. it make people reconsider public transportation and bicycles. it made hybrid cars seem far more sensible than they did a few years ago. people actually check the air pressure in their tires. it's too bad it came at the expense of the oil companies making record profits.
on a side thought.... how come my natural gas prices (in Philadelphia PA) spiked "due to disruptions caused by Hurrican Katrina" and 14 months later they have not gone down one cent? at least gasoline is down about $1/gallon from its peak. natural gas, nothing!
Parent is a fraud: First you tell us to ride a bicicle while you have been driving until you could no more because of your condition. Big lover of the environment are you.
So?
Second, your wife has a prius and you babble some nonsense about driving 'a couple thousand miles a year'. For that mileage it would have been much wiser to buy a normal car. A Prius is more expensive than a normal car and you aren't paying it off.
I love it when a clueless AC gives me advice on how to run my life. I paid $13k in cash for a used 2001 Prius off Craigslist back when I had a license and a much longer commute, since as a big lover of the environment I didn't want to waste gas.
I tried to be clear, but it's not coming across. I'm not suggesting that a car with four seats works for families of five who ride together. That's obviously not true. I'm not suggesting that folks who routinely tow a trailer or a boat can get by with a subcompact. Nor would I make the dubious claim that someone who lives in the country where the roads aren't plowed shouldn't have a vehicle capable of getting them to a hospital/drugstore/bar in an emergency in winter.
*All* I pointed out is that home construction projects are feasible with small cars. Deliveries and rentals are not expensive, and a thoughtfully planned project will only need one. Particularly when you compare them to the cost difference between a pickup and a civic. It seems like people can't justify paying a delivery or rental fee now and then, when the alternative is paying significantly more every month for your car loan and fuel whether you use it or not.
Like you said... utility is handy. But it seems awfully expensive compared to just getting things delivered.
Whoda thunkit, make gas more expensive and people use less of it. I'm shocked, shocked!
Here's hoping gas prices stay high so the poor stay off the road. Underinsured vehicles, poorly maintained jalopies and more traffic are not my idea of things I want to be around during my commute, so if gas were $4/gal and that reduced congestion I'd be a happy panda.
Let 'em take the bus!
I'm more into something along the lines of London, taxing and tolling the hell out of people who drive in the center "zone" (ie: the densely-packed middle of the city) for those people who feel a need to drive in an area where all services and utilities you'd require are within walking distance or a very short bus ride.
If you want to drive in a rural area or distant-suburb, have fun. You're less likely to kill innocents, and you can't just walk to the store and carry your groceries home (and, if you've chosen a rural home, you probably aren't driving to the mall every day to "hang out.") If you want pollute my air and endanger my life just to drive where it's completely unnecessary, you have to pay. Killing city-idling and city-parking-spot-hovering will do basically what you're suggesting, without having to "invade anyone's privacy."
Subaru? Mitsubishi Outlander?
So it's the childrens' fault!
People should not have kids.
So we can save the environment.
So the kids will have a nice place to live.
Please, use preview next time.
:-)
It's "being", not "begin" (to start) - you made this mistake twice.
It's "Acre" (a measure of land area) not "Archer" (a person that shoots arrows at you).
Who'd a thunk it. Looks like economic forces are the best one's to encourage behaviour change. And fuel efficiency innovation too. This is a non-problem. Taxes? Why? Let's just wait until gas prices get high enough and then alternatives will appear. When market forces make it too painful to drive people will naturally drive less and seek cheaper alternatives.
There was a time when movies had plots. So you knew who's ass it was, and why it was farting.
-Not Sure
>Take away the massive tax concessions that make these vehicles
...
>economical
What on earth does that even mean? Do you really think of taxing
something less as being a *gift*?
Maybe we should provide the *same* "tax concessions" on *all other*
vehicles, if you think it's such an important factor
I like the Toyota Echo I got for $10k that gets 40mpg. The equivalent now is the Yaris. It's fun to drive and surprisingly roomy. I can fit 5 large adults no problem, and it's tall enough for my 6'2" self to sit in the back. If they'd come out with a diesel 50mpg would be no problem.
Man, you really need that seminar!
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
It's not a fair comparison. The Prius has/does a great many things that a cheap Scion xA does not.
I too live in Minnesota (for 20+ years) and have *never* owned a 4-wheel drive vehicle. I live in the Twin Cities metro, so perhaps you live outstate where the 4x4s are more needed. But, I do have to say that I've never gotten stuck driving a front wheel drive sedan.
However, I do agree with you that a 4x4 is VERY DESIRABLE when you go off road or want to tow something.
I've been thinking that it might make more sense to rent a bigger vehicle when needed and drive something economical most of the time. Or, if I were you, park that beast and get a civic to commute with, keep the beast for when you *really* need it, which is NOT everytime it snows. Based on your comments above, I'm guessing your pride won't let you do that.
The definition on Wikipedia disagrees with you: "In automobiles, the wheelbase is the distance between the center of the front wheel, and the center of the rear wheel."; and also the phrase "wide wheelbase" is extremely common.
It's discussed in the book "High and MIghty" by Keith Bradsher. If I get a chance maybe I'll do some web searches for you later (but you might try to do a few yourself, you know).
Another reasonable question might be:
"How do the emissions from driving a pickup truck all the time compare to sending a delivery truck as needed and driving a small car the rest?"
or
"Is sending a delivery truck with deliveries for multiple people on a circular route with many stops more efficient than every individual driving to and from the store?"
or
"Is it more efficient to send a single flatbed then to make two or three trips with a pickup for large loads?"
Eeek. I mis-read the line I just quoted, it in fact does agree with you. My apologies.
In any case, the second point stands: the existance of a technical definition doesn't obviate the vernacular definition, and "wide wheelbase" (as opposed to "long wheelbase") is a pretty common term.
Also, you don't really know how good their precision was. If they actually tracked 1000 people over the course of a year, and read off their odometers, their precision would be quite high. 1000 randomly selected subjects is a great sample size, and the data itself would have precision to within a single mile. It's unfortunate that they don't provide more of their data and calculations, but it is just a mass-media news blip. It's not as if they pretend that the article is in fact a peer-reviewed scientific paper. Being critical is great, but sense is required. Being that critical of a story in Reuters suggests that you are taking the story way too seriously to begin with. Save the calls for in-depth analysis for genuinely important sources of information, like scientific research or your shareholders' reports. Reuters is barely more than cheap entertainment.
"4x4s are most definitely /not/ a luxury item here. Before you ask, no, front wheel drive is not sufficient to meet all conditions."
This reminds me of when I was driving across Iowa shortly after an ice storm. I saw truck after SUV after truck on the side of the road. I was especially frightened when I was passed by a big SUV that promptly lost traction and went off the side of the road. I saw no cars wiped out. Why was that? People in 4x4 vehicles believe they make a difference. 99.9% of the time on a snowy/icy road it doesn't (off road is different)... but it does succeed in giving you a false sense of security.
maybe they didn't have any money? :P
harmonious design
That would be "long wheelbase" and "wide track", FWIW.
BD Phone Home!
Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.
Why is it that people tell me I need to get a smaller vehicle just because I drive an SUV? I'm tired of that crap from people who really don't know why I have it. Most every week I pull a trailer 400 miles, then bring another one back (usually these are near full). Try doing that with a hybrid. It doesn't happen as much around these parts as it used to but when we get a big snowstorm I attach a plow (provided by my local city), help clear some of the streets so those *other* cars can get out. Then I use the plow to clear off local parking lots (many for free, mostly non-profit groups and religious institutions). The city lets me and a few others do this because we are helping them out as well. I also help out quite a few people that are stuck, I do this for free, attach a chain to the appropriate part of their car and pull them out. And still people complain that I drive an SUV (sometimes right after I pull them out of a jam... can you believe it?) How many of those that complain that I drive an SUV go camping. I go at least once a month, be it camping in a camp site, or maybe some no trace camping while backpacking. I try to get at least a week long trip in the woods two or three times a year (don't always succeed...). Many of the places I go if you use a lesser vehicle such as a minivan, or god-forbid a hybrid, well good luck to ya, I'll see ya when I get back... I go year round, summer in the heat, winter in the cold and often snow. When its warm out I do ride a motorcycle. Because so much of what I do is so dependent on my SUV it is happening less and less now a days. To bad, as the ride on the motorcycle is so relaxing. (and the fuel millage is so much better than any car out there, but thats not why I ride it...) And because I drive an SUV people want to raise my taxes on gas. No consideration that its needed for one of my jobs, no consideration that I help the community I live in for a very small stipend (more like volunteer work) when the roads get bad. No consideration that some of the other things I do I couldn't do without it. I should start complaining back to people who complain to me (especially the ones I've just helped out...)
Hehe. I'll agree that there a lot of fools on the road in this state and a LOT of them drive SUVs. Many of them seem to think that they're invulnerable behind the wheel of a 4x4. I'd argue, though, that they'd end up in the ditch regardless of what they were driving.
:)
Given the choice, I'll always take a 4x4 in bad weather conditions. Generally, I don't use the second axle as the extra ground clearance in my truck gets me above most of the real trouble. However, when it's really slick and/or the snow is deep I'd far rather have power to both axles. Gentle acceleration and engine braking is a lot easier then. (That's why I prefer a manual over an automatic, btw. Engine braking with most automatics just isn't as easy to control as it is with a clutch and 5 gears to work with.)
I'll also note that I tend to keep lots of space between me and the vehicle in front of me so I don't get surprised nearly as often as the the tailgaters.
that's weird..
:?
there's a rise in unemployment for a few years after each of the bushes were initially elected..
whereas unemployment steadily decreased throughout the entire duration of clinton's administration..
must be coincidence..
Yes, "wide track width" appears to be the technical term in the automotive engineering world.
Have you looked at AWD cars like Subarus or Audis? Always power to all four wheels and there's three differentials so that if only one tire has traction, the power goes to that wheel. Plus being cars they'll handle better than an SUV or pickup.
Hail Eris, full of mischief...
E pluribus sanguinem
Okay, let's check my memory of Bradsher's "High and Mighty" (2002). Here's some quotes, from pages 153-156 (trade paper, 2003 edition published by publicaffairs):
So there you have it. I'd only give myself a B for memory on this one, I was pretty close, but not dead-on -- not too bad for a book I haven't looked at in years, I suppose.
Yep, I have. My Dad owned a Subaru for years. Nice little vehicles.
I've never seen one with the kind of miles on it that I've got on my truck, though. The other gotcha with them is the lack of carrying capacity and towing capability. They're just too small for what I use my truck for.
I live in Minnesota too, and "needing" a 4x4 SUV or truck is a big misconception around here. Virtually all of my winter driving in inclement weather is not on snow covered roads, it's roads covered with packed snow or ice. There is no denying that a 4x4 is unbeatable in deep snow, but most of the time the plows have been busy, and fellow drivers have managed to keep the snow from piling up on the road (if not, chances are my destination is closed anyway!). On a slick surface, I would much rather have my FWD car than a 4x4 truck. Why? On a slick surface, the poorer handling of the large vehicle means you're more likely to get into trouble, the added mass means it'll take you longer to stop it and makes it harder to steer it, and the higher center of gravity means that once you get into trouble, it's more likely you'll end up on your side or roof. Combine this with the false sense of security that the SUV gives most people, and you have a recipe for disaster. It's no mystery to me why I'm always seeing SUVs and trucks wiped out on the side of the road anytime the weather gets too nasty. If you ask me, the absolute best vehicle for winter driving around here is an AWD car like a Subaru.
If your idea of fun is participating in the Tour de France, then yeah, you belong on the road.
I sure do NOT belong on the road. I'm wicked slow compared to you people. I can't accelerate decently. Drivers get frustrated and pissed off at me.
I've even been hit when trying to ride on the road. Nobody ever hit me on the sidewalk, nor have I ever hit anybody on the sidewalk.
For comparison, before I got rid of my last car I was doing averages of under 8,000/year. That's 8 years ago, since when I've hired a car when I perceived a sufficient need (i.e. holidays).
Needless to say, the wife isn't even bothering to learn to drive. What use is it?
Use more compact cities, dudes!
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
Landoverbaptist is a little different from your usual run of the mill ministry:
It's a (hilarious) parody site of one. If you didn't see that then I suppose
your intellect will be the last thing to get in the way of you getting "saved".
Rejoice, mentally innocous poster and Praise the Lord!!