Slashdot Mirror


Volkswagen Seeks To Repair Its Image By Focusing On Electric (wired.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The emissions scandal that's plagued Volkswagen over the past month will be tough to recover from. But they're trying. The company announced a number of changes they're making to their line of vehicles. First, they'll be revamping their flagship Phaeton vehicles to be all-electric. (If you live in the U.S. and haven't heard of these, don't be surprised — they aren't marketed there.) Second, they've announced their intention to install top-of-the-line environmental protection systems in their new diesel cars. (In other words, they'll actually do what they're required by law to do, but vehicle prices will jump significantly.) Their press release is difficult to decipher, given the density of buzzwords and vague promises, but they indicate a greater general focus on hybrids and electric vehicles in the future.

230 comments

  1. History has taught us by rmdingler · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Given the Chevrolet side saddle gas tanks imbroglio, the Ford Pinto, and the Toyota floor mat malfunction,

    I'd say Volkswagon can count on the short term memory of the buying public.

    Like a bad breakup, time will heal this, too.

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

    1. Re:History has taught us by HappyDrgn · · Score: 2

      I'd say Volkswagon can count on the short term memory of the buying public.

      Yup. I bought one this weekend.

    2. Re:History has taught us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GM trucks with side saddle gas tanks were not that bad. One of the videos showing the gas tank blowing up during a test crash was debunked, it was a set up with a model rocket engine ignited to set the leaking gas on fire. The Pinto fiasco is a joke, many rear mounted fuel tanks are still used to this day. Having a rubber flap between the tank and frame to prevent sparks during a crash is not a fix as far as I'm concerned. That's all they did to fix the problem, a rubber or plastic flap.

    3. Re:History has taught us by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      what was it like in the dealership? were they 'hungry' or acting like nothing happened?

      I wonder if people can go to VW and get 'deals' (even on non TDI cars) given the current publicity vw is having to deal with.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    4. Re:History has taught us by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Given the Chevrolet side saddle gas tanks imbroglio, the Ford Pinto, and the Toyota floor mat malfunction, I'd say Volkswagon can count on the short term memory of the buying public.

      It isn't even jsut a matter of short term memory (although yes, that certainly plays into it.) I had a Chevy in the 70's, another from the 80's, and now I have a recent model. The one from the 70's was awful, just a total piece of junk. Right down to a soda can in the door straight off the showroom floor, rattles, plastic coach accouterments that basically melted in the sun in the first year of the car's life, and an engine that should never have made it into a lawnmower, never mind into a car you needed to depend on.

      Then Japan, Inc. kicked their corporate ass, and by the late 80's, the whole picture had changed -- and using "memory" to color that picture would have been a grave mistake. Fast forward to my most recent Chevy, which I bought on the strength of my late 80's model (which is still running just fine 26 years later), and the marque has gone even further in garnering my respect. If they manage to come out with a decent electric that could compete with a Tesla and had the range, I'm pretty sure I'll buy it.

      The idea that a mistake or an outright attempt to do wrong is something that should incur wrath and retribution forever and a day is a uniquely SJW-tainted stupidity, one that pervades American thought (and perhaps elsewhere as well, but it's the USA I am familiar with.) The right thing: fix the problem, reform behavior, move on. That's the sane approach.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    5. Re:History has taught us by aaronl · · Score: 1

      I also just purchased a VW last Thursday. The dealership was saying they were making quite a few more sales than usual from people trading in TDIs for regular gasoline cars. They still had a huge "clean diesel" banner up, though, heh.

    6. Re:History has taught us by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      I also just purchased a VW last Thursday. The dealership was saying they were making quite a few more sales than usual from people trading in TDIs for regular gasoline cars. They still had a huge "clean diesel" banner up, though, heh.

      Hmm..so, are they selling the used/new TDIs for a cheaper price? Can you get one of them before they "fix" it?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    7. Re:History has taught us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bought a gas engine this Monday. The TDI's are currently not for sale unless they have been fixed. But they did knock $3000 off the stick for the Jetta I got. Sweet little car, that 1.8L is a surprise.

    8. Re:History has taught us by HappyDrgn · · Score: 2

      Everything seemed fairly normal, though I don't buy cars often and I was paying cash, so my experience and idea of normal might be off a bit. Sales dude joked about it not being a diesel we laughed for a second and that was about it. I spent over 12 hours test driving cars from a bunch of different manufactures that day and ended up with a Passat, which I was happy with. Comparatively it's a nice car, the fit and finish on the interior is pretty superior and it handled well on some pretty rough roads.

    9. Re:History has taught us by rmdingler · · Score: 1
      Good thoughts. Many folks are unaware of the role that Japanese competition had on American automobile quality.

      To be fair, the competition was coming from somewhere (eventually), but the Japanese got there first.

      Ironic, that the real threat to American automotive manufacturing domination came from Japan and West Germany, nations on the other side of WW2.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    10. Re:History has taught us by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Given the Chevrolet side saddle gas tanks imbroglio, the Ford Pinto, and the Toyota floor mat malfunction,

      I'd say Volkswagon can count on the short term memory of the buying public.

      Yep, people are still buying automatic VW's after years of DSG failures. They're very quick to forget.

      However Volkswagen wont get away with this unscathed. I'll put good money on the fact VAG will need to sell off a few of their non core brands to raise enough capital to pay fines and perform whatever pithy attempt at fixing the issue they try. This means that Bugatti will go, Bentley (I think another large German might like this to compete with Mercedes/Rolls, either that or Tata to complement their ownership of Jaguar/Land Rover), Lamborghini would be a huge capital raise as Lambo is actually profitable and Porsche will take a controlling stake in the company with Porsche boss Mueller at the helm.

      VW will get cut down to the core brands of Volkswagen, Audi, Skoda and SEAT as all of these manufacturers basically make the same car (A VW Golf is an Audi A3, SEAT Leon and Skoda Octavia).

      In the short term as damage control, VAG will probably try to bring the relatively unknown Euro brands like Skoda and SEAT to the US or at least out of obscurity to increase sales. People who might balk at a VW Golf may very well buy a SEAT Leon after a clever marketing campaign.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    11. Re:History has taught us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think they will sell brands (except maybe Ducati, which is the odd one out in the portfolio). They have invested too much and most of the non-core brands are profitable (unlike SEAT, for example). However, they will probably relax the schedule of new models for the non-core brands. If anything, they might pull out of the US, at least with the VW brand, since that is where they are losing heaps of money and gaining any significant market share in the coming years would require billions of investments which they won't have to spare, even if it were worth the risk.

      They will have to pay many billions in retrofitting cars, fines and compensation, but that is at worst a few months worth of revenue. It will probably be less than the cash reserve, so I think they can manage without any haphazard moves. Then there is the problem that the scandal and the media bashing will result in lost sales. This will be a sizeable effect in the short term and it will affect profitability, which depends strongly on the degree of production capacity use for a car business. However, VW has been struggling to meet demand for a while, so it is probably a managable problem, especially with the accelerated cost reduction programme. I also think the reputation damage will fade away when competitors start to admit having done similar things - which will eventually happen, given the real-world NOx figures of other diesel cars from essential all other manufacturers.

      In short, VW is in trouble but they will survive and sale of subsidiaries or massive layoffs will likely not be necessary. It is however ironic that a few cheating managers and engineers caused the company way more damage than the entire financial crisis did.

  2. PewPew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    And shall be known as the Phaeton Torpedo

  3. You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A low-speed electric motor for idling situations. I was just thinking this at the drive-in the other day, an electric motor to handle that would be much more workable, I didn't know that it'd take 93 seconds for my food to get out, but I did know I'd be going very slow. The same might apply in other situations, like at a stop light, or in congested traffic.

    I just don't know if the transmission interchange is worth it.

    Any thoughts, ye wise of Dotted Slash?

    1. Re:You know what I would like? by turkeydance · · Score: 1

      well, your A/C would stop cooling. the fan would still run, but the compressor would stop.

    2. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No reason the compressor could not be electrically powered; after all you don't need a piston engine to run a house AC...

    3. Re:You know what I would like? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2
      I live in the UK. We only use A/C three days a year. And diesel costs $6 per gallon. (approx 1c per drip).

      I would go for the "electric up to 5MPH" solution used with buses for my car. I don't want petrol, thanks. I sometimes tow things.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    4. Re:You know what I would like? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      I live in the UK. We only use A/C three days a year.

      And I live in New Orleans. We turn the A/C off three days a year.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    5. Re: You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that a Prius, pretty much exactly?

    6. Re: You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically, but the Prius is a bit bigger in terms of the electric parts than I'm thinking, I'm talking very slow speed situations instead.

    7. Re:You know what I would like? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      People lived in New Orleans for years before Air Conditioning was ever invented. Perhaps not people like you, however.

    8. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, to be pedantic, many electric A/C compressors are piston based (scroll being the alternative).

    9. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know in the deep south in the antebellum period that the "southern belles" would often bathe 4 to 5 times a day? Otherwise you stink.

      They weren't comfortable.

    10. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compressor != engine

    11. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC is really useful for moisture control as well as for cooling.

    12. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compressor != engine

      But you can make a Compressor out of an engine, I am sure youtube has some videos of air compressors made from two engines one running and powering the second which acts as the compressor.

    13. Re: You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once you add an electric motor there's no reason not to go big.

    14. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any recent car will shut down the engine when you clutch out in neutral then start it again when you clutch in.
      This is a feature that is literally on all cars.

    15. Re:You know what I would like? by Rei · · Score: 1

      I live in Iceland. In our drivers' ed books there was a section that said something to the effect of, "For a while car manufacturers experimented with adding air conditioning systems into vehicles. This generally proved to not be worth the cost and posed maintenance issues, so few do this anymore."

      Here air conditioning, whether in the home or in a car, means "opening a window". Or more often just "turning down your heater" or "taking off your wool sweater". ;) Large buildings sometimes have "loftræsing", but that usually just means a blower to circulate air, no chilling unit involved. The hottest it's ever been recorded anywhere in the country was 30,5C (87F); the record in Reykjavík is 26,2C (79F) A typical July day in Reykjavík has a high of 15C (59F), and people complain about the heat once you start getting close to 20C (68F).

      Diesel costs $7 per UK gallon ($5.80 per US gallon). Gasoline is marginally more expensive.

      I'd go with all electric. Of course, our city is trying to force everyone to bike by spending vast sums of money to rip out parking and turn 4 lane roads int A)o 2-lane with needlessly large sidewalks or B) alternating left/right turn lanes (so you have to keep switching) and packing them with stop lights for every little intersection, all for the specific design purpose of slowing down traffic to encourage people to bike instead. Oh how I wish I was kidding...

      --
      The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
    16. Re: You know what I would like? by Rei · · Score: 1

      That's what the original Prius was - only low speed electric. But as the AC pointed out below, if you're going to add an electric motor, you might as well add a good one, it doesn't make much of a weight difference.

      --
      The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
    17. Re:You know what I would like? by goodmanj · · Score: 1

      Given that Iceland has nearly unlimited geothermal and hydroelectric power, electric vehicles seem like an obvious choice.

    18. Re:You know what I would like? by Rei · · Score: 1

      We're so awash in electric resources that we ship in aluminum ore, refine it here with local power, then ship out the aluminum ;) And despite being a ridiculously windy country we only recently built our first wind turbines. There's just been no need. Heck, I'd like to see them build more if only to act as windbreaks ;) Last winter my land got hit by 60m/s (134mph) winds in the strongest of the windstorms - windstorms that hit once every 2-3 days for the whole winter.

      That said, I do wish they'd stop trying to dam up every river they can get their hands on. I'm all down with geo but I'm not a big hydro fan.

      --
      The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
    19. Re:You know what I would like? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Well, usually the AC compressor is belt-driven right off the mechanical spinning bits of the engine. You'd have to redesign the mechanical clutch that already exists for on / off to also take input from your electrical motor optionally, in addition to adding the electric motor and the increased battery capacity to run the thing, knowing that you're not always going to have a brand new battery under the hood. Complexity also means initial expense and more expensive repairs over time.

      It's never as simple as it seems.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    20. Re:You know what I would like? by david_thornley · · Score: 2

      Back then, if a heat wave came in and people died, tough.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    21. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Say what? ICE engine that *turns off* just because I put it in neutral? sounds like a lot of wear and tear.

    22. Re:You know what I would like? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Just take a V8 and replace the cam, intake and exhaust and you can have one bank of 4 cylinders acting like a compressor. That's how most tow around jackhammer compressors work.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:You know what I would like? by KGIII · · Score: 1

      I own a brand new, bespoke even, BMW 640Li (yes, that one and yes it's nice) and no, no it does not do that. In fact, I have an absurd number of vehicles because I enjoy them and I've been growing my collection for years now. Not one does that. Of course most of them are all very specific model years and makes and not new but, still... I did have a buddy with some borderline moronic Ford Escape Hybrid (i laughed at him - it went to the junk yard, nobody would even buy it) and it does shut off when stopped and used electricity when going slow - sometimes. It was junk. For the up-thread posters - AC worked during the times it was on electric power and even when stopped at a stop light.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    24. Re: You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wtf! This is exactly what an hybrid does, you ignorant person.

      There is no problem running an electric ac compressor and moving the car at low speeds on battery power.

      For the matter, the piston engine can be used for driving the wheels, charging the battery, heating some mechanical parts, etc. Most hybrids do all that very well. I drive a c max and the comprehensiveness of its energy efficiency algorithms is absolutely fantastic.

    25. Re:You know what I would like? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Back then, if a heat wave came in and people died, tough.

      Ah yes, the good old days!

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    26. Re:You know what I would like? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I live in Iceland. In our drivers' ed books there was a section that said something to the effect of, "For a while car manufacturers experimented with adding air conditioning systems into vehicles. This generally proved to not be worth the cost and posed maintenance issues, so few do this anymore."

      Do they actually remove the air conditioning system for vehicles imported to iceland then? Most non-basic cars (even in the UK) have AC as standard, even though it's barely needed here.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    27. Re:You know what I would like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is, but it makes the car more economical on paper (and probably slightly so in the real world too), so most new cars from the last few years have it. It's called a start-stop system. You can usually disable it.

  4. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's also a Canadian issue.

  5. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by ledow · · Score: 5, Informative

    Er... The EU are looking into it too and they will be recalling cars from there just the same.

    It's not an EU only issue, they're in for a world of hurt world-wide.

  6. There is a reason that they circumvented... by Tighe_L · · Score: 0

    Because the EPA requirements are zealous, and makes producing a diesel vehicle unviable. The funny thing is electric cars are the real unviable vehicles, hydrogen powered vehicles are the best idea, only waste they produce from the combustion of hydrogen is water.

    1. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bullshit. They conned the entire fucking planet. Europe has far higher emission requirements than the US, and most countries require vehicles to be tested annually. Fail the test, your is rendered illegal for public roads. VW's aim was to mislead the public about the efficiency of their diesel engines, but the efficiency took a dive in clean running mode, so they switched it off only for testing conditions.

    2. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While mostly true, the US has stricter requirements for NOx emissions than europe. I haven't reviewed the Euro 6 standards, but they don't go into effect until 2017.

    3. Re: There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently you have read none of the articles on this subject or your reading comprehension is low. US emission requirements are much higher than Europe.

    4. Re: There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Depends, the NOx limit in EU is much higher than the US. The CO2 limit in the EU is lower than the US. Different things to optimize or cheat for.

    5. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by rch7 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      EU has higher requirements for CO and in general lower requirements for NOx, except maybe very latest EuroN test that raises a bar closer to few years old EPA test. NOx is what matters for smog. Paris at times is no better than Chinese cities and now they try to prevent diesels entering downtown. Maybe they should not have allowed them on the roads in the first place.
      European annual road tests are BS in most countries except Germany, Switzerland and few others that take them seriously. Especially anywhere to the East of Western Europe. First, you don't need to pass new test with old vehicles. You need to meet only some old BS test. Then, you can just quickly tune the system to produce better results before the test at the expense of efficiency, and tune back as soon as you leave testing facility. Many older cares on the road have catalytic converters removed - they cost money to replace, but you can actually sell them for small money for precious metals inside.
      There is no practical way to control all old car emissions on roads EU wide.

    6. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by ndavis · · Score: 1

      Because the EPA requirements are zealous, and makes producing a diesel vehicle unviable. The funny thing is electric cars are the real unviable vehicles, hydrogen powered vehicles are the best idea, only waste they produce from the combustion of hydrogen is water.

      If you believe Hydrogen powered vehicles are the future then you should really be pushing for electric vehicles. Why because hydrogen powered vehicles will produce electricity and not be burned like current gas vehicles. This means any findings we have with electric vehicles will directly apply to hydrogen vehicles.

      In fact when Chevy started building the first Volt they borrowed a lot of information that was produced by the team working on a hydrogen vehicle and used that to help build the Volt.

    7. Re: There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      English is a funny language, the standards could be higher because the emissions allowed are lower.

    8. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Tighe_L · · Score: 0

      Silly, I am talking about hydrogen powered combustion engines, they produce more power than a gasoline engine. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    9. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If you believe Hydrogen powered vehicles are the future then you should really be pushing for electric vehicles.

      I think you failed to realize that he was speaking of fuel-cell electric propulsion vehicles, when mentioning hydrogen power. The kind of equipment that blew up in Apollo 13, but much perfected ever since. Toyota now sells a series produced fuel-cell engined car called Mirai, but it has a very ugly body. Rumor says they are working on a re-body, codenamed Miku that has acceptable looks for the euro-atlantic market.

      On the other hand, battery-electric powered vehicles are really silly. The whole Earth would need to be mined into Moon or Mars to obtain enough material for a large-scale conversion from internal combustion to batteries. In contrast, the Mirai's fuel cell only needs a few kilos of steel and some 2oz of platinum, which is very little (albeit very expensive).

    10. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. They conned the entire fucking planet. Europe has far higher emission requirements than the US

      Bullshit. The main area where Europe has stricter emission requirements is CO2, and that's irrelevant from a pollution point of view. That also doesn't require any high tech fixes, since you can simply put in wimpier motors.

    11. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by ndavis · · Score: 2

      Silly, I am talking about hydrogen powered combustion engines, they produce more power than a gasoline engine. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Maybe I'm reading this wrong but it appears the Wiki shows the Hydrogen version made less power by almost 50% when compared to running on gas (80kW on hydrogen vs 154kW on gas).

    12. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > Europe has far higher emission requirements than the US

      European regulation crusades against high tail-pipe emissions of CO2 (global climate change arch-enemy) and PM10 (tiny soot particles eventually causing cancer and systematic heart failure after decades of accumulation in the lungs). PM10 is a big-big issue for diesels, necessitating particulate filters to meet Euro 4/5/6 norms. Another trick is "AdBlue" tech that uses acid refined from urination to wash tailpipe exhausts clean.

      In contrast, as far as I understand, US regulations are much focused on the various nitrogen-oxides, which cause the classic "smog" effect. Generally speaking Europe receives more rain, so NOx is less of an issue for the old continent. (But France and especially its capital Paris is an exception to this generalization.) It should noted as well that Europe uses a lot of methane (~ Russia's piped natural gas) for heating and electric power generation, so their coal/wood burning emissions are lesser, helping to alleviate the NOx problem. (Poland is an exception in Europe, they are crazy about poor quality "brown" coal, have no reactor and afraid to buy much gas from Putin.) Meanwhile USA is a big consumer of coal and mineral oil.

    13. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by ndavis · · Score: 1

      I think you failed to realize that he was speaking of fuel-cell electric propulsion vehicles, when mentioning hydrogen power. The kind of equipment that blew up in Apollo 13, but much perfected ever since. Toyota now sells a series produced fuel-cell engined car called Mirai, but it has a very ugly body. Rumor says they are working on a re-body, codenamed Miku that has acceptable looks for the euro-atlantic market. On the other hand, battery-electric powered vehicles are really silly. The whole Earth would need to be mined into Moon or Mars to obtain enough material for a large-scale conversion from internal combustion to batteries. In contrast, the Mirai's fuel cell only needs a few kilos of steel and some 2oz of platinum, which is very little (albeit very expensive).

      I did not fail to realize this what I'm saying is that if you believe hydrogen power is the way via Fuel Cell then having electric vehicles now would help the auto industry move toward electrifying cars which will help as then you have electric components ready to go for when/if hydrogen becomes capable.

      I own an electric vehicle and realize they are not for everyone but saying we are going to jump from gas to hydrogen is ridiculous as the big issues with hydrogen are storage, infrastructure, and creation. I believe these can be overcome but electric vehicles are a stop gap until that happens and will also help develop better internals for electric vehicles no matter how they are powered.

    14. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europe has far higher emission requirements than the US

      Not for NOx in passenger vehicles, the one thing that modern diesel engines still have trouble with. It can be done, either with low efficiency (like in Mazda SkyActiv) or with AdBlue fluid injection (in most Euro 6 diesel engines), which adds cost and involves filling up with AdBlue periodically.

      VW's aim was to mislead the public about the efficiency of their diesel engines, but the efficiency took a dive in clean running mode, so they switched it off only for testing conditions.

      "Clean" is a bit misleading here. In the test mode, the engine produces less NOx, but more other pollutants (most of which are worse than NOx). However, the California standards are only very strict for NOx, so that made them pass the test.

      For the European market, the same tricks pulled by other manufacturers would have been enough, since the NOx limits for diesel cars are a bit higher. Most other diesel cars have comparable if not worse road-to-test emissions ratios, so other manufacturers probably also employ tricks that optimise for low NOx values under test-like conditions, but presumably without literally switching engine maps when being tested. VW could have done the same (and probably have for some of the non-affected engines) and they would not have had to recall a single car in Europe.

      However, for some reason it seems that VW used the exact same "cheating" firmware on EU-market engines as they did for US-market engines. I hope the internal investigation will clear up why. It seems very illogical - almost as if some senior people responsible for engine development and/or production were really unaware of the cheating, but then one would expect those same people to be the ones who redered it in the first place. I do think that is very good that they are actually going to retrofit existing EU-market cars with SCR systems, even though that is probably not legally required, but then they probably have to be very nice to regulators at this point. Ironically, it would make the affected cars some of the cleanest on the road.

    15. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

      Don't be so certain that Europe has higher standards or that they even enforce them. They're just as corrupt as we are:

      http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09...

    16. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      For legibility purposes, due to 'higher' being vague, I'd suggest using words like 'stricter' and 'looser'. A strict standard would require less of what's bad, and more of what's good. A 'Higher' standard for something like NOx could mean more is allowed to be emitted, ie the level allowed is higher, or that less is allowed, because the standard itself is 'higher'.

      Which is higher: 60mg/km, or 20mg/mile of NOx?

      US has, currently, stricter standards for NOx, especially given that the latest US revision dropped them by an order of magnitude. the 60 and 20 were pulled from memory.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    17. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by fnj · · Score: 2

      European regulation crusades against ... PM10 (tiny soot particles eventually causing cancer and systematic heart failure after decades of accumulation in the lungs). PM10 is a big-big issue for diesels

      Nonsense. Most visible smoke is larger particles than PM10, and is not fully respirable. The cilia trap most of it before it gets to the alveoli. PM10 is relatively coarse particulates. PM2.5 is fine particulates, and below this there are superfine particulates too, and these are the more dangerous. PM2.5 and superfine particulates are a problem in gasoline engines as well, particularly the newer direct injection designs. Hysteria has just not centered on this yet.

    18. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by beanpoppa · · Score: 1

      And where is your hydrogren coming from? And what are the energy losses to store it in an automobile compared to a chemical battery?

    19. Re:There is a reason that they circumvented... by samwichse · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but the range is only 100km (62 miles).

      And the 0-100km/hr time is 10 seconds. A Honda Civic with the crappy CVT will do that.

  7. Fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rules and Regulations dictated from on high by some collection of bureaucrats—whose greatest achievement was to convince even dumber people to cast "votes" for their election to office—are always going to be a fantasy.

    No doubt, solutions need to be found to pollution and climate change, etc., but the world also needs to function. If it weren't for Volkswagen's "cheating", then the world would have been a much poorer place.

    1. Re: Fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think that's silly. Regulations do need to be reasonable, but the industry reaction of "they'll kill our profits" is not borne out in practice. In fact, requiring industry to invest to improve their products in ways "not wanted by customers" spurs innovation -- and thus the economy.

    2. Re:Fantasy by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      Rules and Regulations dictated from on high by some collection of bureaucrats—whose greatest achievement was to convince even dumber people to cast "votes" for their election to office—are always going to be a fantasy.

      I like to breathe. It's something I do every day. I'd like to breathe clean air, thank you. If you want to pollute, don't do it in my air

      Volkswagen's problem was not that there wasn't technology available to clean the NOx out of the diesel emissions. Their problem was after deciding to license the clean diesel technology ("BlueTec") from Daimler, the CEO got pushed out and replaced by a new CEO who cancelled the deal and made a deliberate decision not to license BlueTec. This was because their engineers claimed that they could solve the problem using their own technology, turbocharged direct injection (TDI). http://www.wsj.com/articles/vw...

      They were wrong.

      So, the answer is that the technology was there, but Volkswagen had made a decision not to use it.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    3. Re:Fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the technology was there—expensive technology that would have made the world poorer.

    4. Re:Fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TDI is just VW's trade name for their turbocharhed direct-injection diesel engines, like Daimler's CDi. The technology VW used instead of SCR with AdBlue fluid (BlueTec) is LNT, a Lean NOx Trap, combined with dynamically adjusting the EGR valve to reduce available oxygen and combustion temperature. The LNT, also called NOx adsorber, attracts NO and NO2 molecules to its surface. It is periodically cleaned by injecting fuel, that will react with the NOx molecules to form water and nitrogen. This is the way most pre-Euro-6 engines manage NOx emissions.

      Recently, SCR is becoming more common, especially in lorries and I expect that it will become standard in a few years. It is a more expensive solution, but it allows for better efficiency, lower emission levels and longer engine life. It might even be introduced in petrol engines, which have started to operate more like diesel engines in recent years.

    5. Re:Fantasy by EndlessNameless · · Score: 1

      So now that the NOx requirement creates a demand for emissions-reducing technology, shouldn't the market supply ever cheaper and better emissions-reducing equipment? Isn't that how the market works---finding better ways to fulfill a demand?

      Just because it is expensive now does not mean that it will always be expensive.

      Meanwhile, climate change is happening now, and the effects will be worse the longer we wait to address it.

      --

      ---
      According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.
  8. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem - NOT by Kartu · · Score: 2

    It isn't US only issue, they've messed things up in other countries as well.
    3.6m european cars need hardware fix:
    http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/v...

    Before that, there was (mostly unnoticed) "oscar scandal" with ADAC rigging votes in favour of VW Golf:
    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/774a...

    VW is rather "known" in German auto industry for having cars that perform on par (e.g. VW Sharan vs Ford S-Max) yet are regarded as way better cars by many journalists "for some reason".

  9. Suggestion... by DriveDog · · Score: 0

    Try making reliable electronic systems. I know of no one who's bought a VW made in the last 10 years who hasn't fought with electronic engine control system gremlins. From a consumer standpoint, that's a much bigger issue, and the reason for the growing number who won't consider buying a VW.

    1. Re:Suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. VW cars have far bigger problems than high NOx emissions. I think people are suckered into buying VWs because of the good handling. And their motors and transmissions are tough, which is why you see a lot of old VWs still around. But the electronics and body are unreliable, and the cars require frequent and expensive maintenance. Don't waste your money.

    2. Re:Suggestion... by eulernet · · Score: 2

      A french magazine for consumers wrote an interesting article about long-term reliability of the various cars.

      Volkswagen has a generally good quality, but still a lot of problems.
      Here are a few ones:
      - fouling and breakage of the turbo diesel 4 cylinder
      - failure of injectors and water/oil leakage on the 1.6 TDI
      etc.

      The recommended models are : Up!, Polo (except diesel until 2014), current Golf Jetta and Passat, New Beetle, Sharan since 2013 and current Touareg.

      If you are interested, I can translate some of their recommendations.

    3. Re:Suggestion... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Don't forget their awesome TDI engines from before this mess that tended to shear crank shafts, destroying the valves and contaminating the entire engine with metal shards; and their flywheels that would crack and explode taking half the gearbox with it.

      The VWs of the last decade are nowhere near the quality of those that came before.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    4. Re:Suggestion... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Car advice from the frogs? Not just no, HELL NO!

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    5. Re:Suggestion... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      VW made some fine air cooled cars.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  10. No doubt they can cheat on electric cars as well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fines and pledges not to cheat again would do more to repair their image.

  11. More EVs are welcome, but... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

    VW need to contribute to infrastructure in countries where they are sold. For example, in the UK most of the rapid charger network was paid for by Nissan, and a lesser number by Renault. Other EV and PHEV manufacturers like BMW, VW, Mitsubishi, Vauxhall, Toyota and the rest contributed next to nothing, and we badly need more infrastructure to support their vehicles.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:More EVs are welcome, but... by ndavis · · Score: 1

      VW need to contribute to infrastructure in countries where they are sold. For example, in the UK most of the rapid charger network was paid for by Nissan, and a lesser number by Renault. Other EV and PHEV manufacturers like BMW, VW, Mitsubishi, Vauxhall, Toyota and the rest contributed next to nothing, and we badly need more infrastructure to support their vehicles.

      I agree but I think all the manufacturers should get involved in this and I'm surprised more shopping areas have not started to install charging units. I know in my area (Maryland) I shop at Mom's Organic Market simply because they have charging stations for when I'm shopping. Also as I have an electric car it has to be new meaning I should have money to shop. This seems like the perfect time to install them as electric car owners have funds to spend.

    2. Re:More EVs are welcome, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree completely. We don't tolerate gasoline vehicles that have a 50-80 mile range so there's no need for everyone to install refueling stations. It might be different if reasonable range wasn't achievable with electric vehicles but Tesla has already proved it is possible.

      That said even if home charging is the norm there needs to be more real infrastructure improvements to the power distribution infrastructure to handle the extra demand.

    3. Re: More EVs are welcome, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switching to EVs will not create a big increase in electricity demand. I have 2 EVs and the increase in electricity usage is not even noticeable.

      On a national level full conversation to EVs is expected to increase demand by 10%.(European consumption numbers).

  12. Phaeton by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always thought of Phaeton as a very nice car name, as in "Dad, might I have your car for a ride?

    1. Re:Phaeton by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The phaeton was Ferdinand PiÃch's pet project, who was VW AGs CEO at the time,

      The Phaeton was an idiotic thing to do. They re-invented the Audi D1 platform, but they didn't really make it any better, just prettier. Meanwhile, Audi brought out the D2 platform, which was better. And the rest is history... boring history with low sales volumes.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    So VW decides to "fix" a problem that (technically) is a US only issue by greenwashing up a car they don't sell in the US.

    It's not "only" a US issue. In fact, the numbers I've heard are somewhere between 500,000 and 650,000 cars affected in the US, but 11 million world-wide. There are a lot more of those cars in Europe than the US, and Europe has a lot more diesel cars on the road.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  14. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by goodmanj · · Score: 1

    Their design is a problem everywhere, but it's only(*) illegal in the US.

  15. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Tx · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yup. I'm in the UK, and I got a letter from VW yesterday onfirming my car will need a fix. No details except that the are working on it.

    --
    Oh no... it's the future.
  16. unexplained fires are a matter for the courts by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    And by that is due to fine print saying you must use our arbitration system and the courts will just say that.

  17. Then they should make a gigafactory. by monkeyxpress · · Score: 1

    Electric technology is not hard. Infact, it is ridiculously easy compared to designing a low-emissions, direct injected, variable timing, variable geometry turbocharged combustion engine that needs to do 300,000 kms in a range of harsh conditions. Even Tesla uses a pretty compromised powertrain design (oversized induction motor without multi-speed gearbox) because is just doesn't really matter at this point (plus they get the ludicrous mode thing as a byproduct).

    The only issue electric cars have now is the cost of the batteries. And the only way this will be solved is through building more and better battery factories.

    I imagine this is why existing car companies are so reluctant to jump into the electric market. All of them will realise that at some point battery prices will cause them to have to write off billions in sunk investment costs, but what CEO would want to spend money to bring that day forward.

    1. Re:Then they should make a gigafactory. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While that is probably the most important problem, another one is battery energy density. Nobody is going to buy a 1700kg Golf, or one that has to be recharged every 200km for several hours.

      That being said, I agree that all car manufacturers are basically waiting for cheap, reliable and compact batteries, as well as market demand to increase. An electric car is simpler to design and manufacture than an ICE car and other manufacturers will eat Tesla's lunch as soon as they think the market is ready.

  18. Climate change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why won't Slashdot post the news that Freeman Dyson said that climate change was a load of bunk and that the climate models are completely wrong?

    1. Re:Climate change by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      First, because that's not actually what he said, and second, because this is a news site, and that is not news, it's just repeating what he said in 2007.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    2. Re:Climate change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why won't Slashdot post the news that Freeman Dyson said that climate change was a load of bunk and that the climate models are completely wrong?

      As soon as Dr Dyson becomes an expert on climate, his opinions are noteworthy and newsworthy. Until then, his opinion in that field is as meaningful as any other crank's.

  19. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by NotDrWho · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, they're not actually going to fix the problem. They're just going to have their computers report that it's fixed.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  20. Diesel hybrids would be perfect for VW by goodmanj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I did an obsessive amount of research on VW's clean diesel technology, and the engineering issues that motivated their decision to cheat. Going hybrid would solve all their problems. Well, the technical ones anyway.

    The problem is that their patented "clean NOx trap" pollution control technology involves storing NOx pollution in a zeolite "molecular sponge". The sponge needs to be cleaned out periodically by changing the engine fuel-to-air ratio: when that happens (for a few seconds every minute or two), engine performance is drastically reduced. VW's engine computer tries to keep this from happening while the driver is accelerating, but apparently it wasn't good enough, so they programmed the computer to not bother with trap cleaning unless it's being tested in an EPA lab.

    With a full hybrid system, the engine can run at optimum efficiency at all times, and can take a break to clean the NOx trap whenever it wants: the electric motor and batteries can take over.

    1. Re:Diesel hybrids would be perfect for VW by fraxinus-tree · · Score: 1

      Diesel hybrid is a nonsense. I know they exist, but still the whole hybrid jazz is about overcoming problems of petrol engine the diesel just does not have.

    2. Re:Diesel hybrids would be perfect for VW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GP explained one good reason to go diesel hybrid. Another is regenerative braking.
      Apparently, diesel-electric is compelling enough that locomotive engines use it. Sure, diesel provides one of the benefits that electric boasts (low-RPM torque), but what are the negatives of diesel-electric? I'm genuinely ignorant and curious.

    3. Re:Diesel hybrids would be perfect for VW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So trains don't exist anymore. Good to know.

      Hint: every modern train engine is a diesel-electric 'hybrid'.

    4. Re:Diesel hybrids would be perfect for VW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most trains are electric. Those that aren't, are indeed usually diesel-electric (but some are diesel-hydraulic).

  21. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by dbIII · · Score: 1

    However in a lot of other places these cars do not violate the local standards.
    It's mostly a California issue with the standards violation. The fraud issue however is still fraud no matter whether the standards apply in a small area or large.

    I think VW are playing the odds and see being caught at fraud as just a business expense that will cost less than if they hadn't done the fraud in the first place. GM came out ahead when they were caught doing something almost identical in 1996 after all (the wikipedia entry on GM gives some info).

  22. Cross Blue by ndavis · · Score: 1

    I think Volkswagen should really pursue the Cross Blue concept they unveiled years ago. This would be a seven passenger SUV with a diesel generator for the electric motor with plug-in-hybrid capabilities. This would be similar to the Mitsubishi vehicle which is selling so many they still have not been able to bring it to the US. They should move in this direction where they use the diesel engines as the generator instead of the direct drive model. I would think a diesel engine run at a specific RPM would be able to pass emissions testing as they could then run it specifically for lower emissions.

    1. Re:Cross Blue by naris · · Score: 1

      They are.

  23. The EPA is not the bad guy here by sjbe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the EPA requirements are zealous, and makes producing a diesel vehicle unviable.

    No it does not. Diesels can easily meet the emissions rules and there are plenty of vehicles that do it without cheating. VW cheated because they didn't want to install the expensive equipment necessary to make this happen such as a urea injection system. It has nothing to do with diesel technology and everything to do with profit motive. VW cheated to pad their bottom line.

    The funny thing is electric cars are the real unviable vehicles, hydrogen powered vehicles are the best idea, only waste they produce from the combustion of hydrogen is water.

    Umm, what? Hydrogen powered cars are clearly a non-starter at this time. Basically zero fuel infrastructure unless you use derivatives of hydrocarbons which basically ends up with the same sort of emissions problems we currently face. They've got high emissions intensity because our primary source of hydrogen is from natural gas. They also have low performance (comparatively) and poor efficiency (comparatively) with PHEVs. While conceptually hydrogen power has some attractive features, in practice it isn't superior to existing alternatives and there is no evidence to suggest that will change in the near future.

    Since you think (wrongly IMO) that electric cars are "unviable", I'm not going to waste time trying to convince you otherwise but so far the evidence does not appear to be agreeing with you. Electric and hybrid electric vehicles are pretty clearly the next evolution in automobiles and that only happens if they are a viable technology.

    1. Re:The EPA is not the bad guy here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, it seems that the biggest issue with H-cars is the storage. Gas (liquid gasoline) is just easier to store than gas (gaseous hydrogen). Gaseous fuels are all kinds of trouble. E-cars use a solid fuel (Li-Ion batteries) which, is really nice, the main issue with them is that rather than move the energy chemically (which is easy with liquid fuels) they must move the energy electrically, which causes thermal losses and is slower.

    2. Re:The EPA is not the bad guy here by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      Electric and hybrid electric vehicles are pretty clearly the next evolution in automobiles and that only happens if they are a viable technology.

      You seem to be quite sure of this... I would question as to why?

      Is it because of all the press they get?

      Is it because of all the sales they get?

      Well, they DO get a lot of press... but sales? Plug in EVs of all types were less than 1% of the total light car and truck sales in the US in 2014 (it was 0.7% to be exact).

      That is a rounding error, not the "coming replacement of ICE cars".

      Now, that number might grow into something other than a rounding error, but lets be frank, if it tripled in the next three years, the media might well say, "EV sales have tripled", and yet the number would still be a rounding error, abit less of one.

    3. Re:The EPA is not the bad guy here by wings · · Score: 1

      NOx is created during combustion in a nitrogen rich environment (air). Simply switching to hydrogen as a fuel won't eliminate NOx production.

    4. Re:The EPA is not the bad guy here by slfnflctd · · Score: 2

      ...not to mention how they still haven't found a good solution for hydrogen tanks becoming brittle over time and requiring replacement.

    5. Re:The EPA is not the bad guy here by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well, they DO get a lot of press... but sales? ...
      That is a rounding error, not the "coming replacement of ICE cars".

      And you flip-flopped AGAIN. Yesterday you were banging on about how there too many EVs, so people had to unplug each other from public charing points.

      The truth is, EVs will go through the normal technology curve that any replacement technology does. For example there were a few years when flat screen TVs were rare and expensive. And people like you were asking what the point was. And then, all of a sudden, no-one had a CRT TV any more. Blink and you missed the tipping point.

    6. Re: The EPA is not the bad guy here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hydrogen cars do not use combustion engines, they use fuel cells, batteries and electric motors.

  24. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    So VW decides to "fix" a problem that (technically) is a US only issue by greenwashing up a car they don't sell in the US.

    The irony...

    From the press release:
    It was decided to switch over to installing only diesel drives with SCR and AdBlue technology in Europe and North America as soon as possible. Diesel vehicles will only be equipped with exhaust emissions systems that use the best environmental technology.

    They are fixing the problem by putting in the exhaust cleaning diesel technologies that they had previously not put on their diesels (in the apparently mistaken belief that they would by able to solve the emissions problem without them.)

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  25. Phaeton by naris · · Score: 1

    The Phaeton was sold in the US when it was introduced. However, the sales of the $70K VW were not good so they decided to withdraw it from the US Market.

    The phaeton was Ferdinand Piëch's pet project, who was VW AGs CEO at the time, and was part of an effort to take VW upscale as the currency conversion of Euros to Dollars (paying Euros to make cars sold for Dollars) was making it difficult to make a profit on mass market cars

  26. They did sell the Phateon here by Zeorge · · Score: 1

    But, it's a miserable vehicle. Good luck if you can find a used one as they all literally broke down after time and became unusable. In less than 5 years or something absurd.

    1. Re:They did sell the Phateon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But 12 cylinders! The luxury!

      Seriously, though... I saw a Phaeton on a used car lot back in 2008 and it was $50k and had obviously been "rode hard and put away wet". The sticker in the window said "as-is" and described a host of mechanical problems. And it only had 40k miles on it.

      I didn't bother walking over to the VW new car lot. Instead, I went to the Honda dealer across the street. I'm still driving my Ridgeline, and it's still a good vehicle.

    2. Re:They did sell the Phateon here by fnj · · Score: 1

      The problem with the Phaeton was ENTIRELY predictable to anyone who had experience with the INDESCRIBABLY TERRIBLE VW dealer servicing. It's like they hire a bunch a bunch of high school dropouts with unusually low intelligence, experience, and dexterity, and then the service managers tell them in essence to cut every possible corner and not worry about following very precise procedures developed by engineering.

      As a result, every time you take your vehicle in for work, it comes out in overall poorer shape, quite often with small parts missing, and just about always with fasteners re-used that are designated one-time-use-only.

      On top of that, their idea of repairing a mechanical problem is to quickly come up with a list of conceivable causes for the observed problem, and then replace parts one after another until the problem goes away - telling the poor customer at the end that all of the replacements were necessary and charging him up the wazoo for all of the parts and "work". Too often, the problem is something like "does not shift right" and the corrective action is "replace transmission - remit $5,000".

      It is by an enormous margin the worst dealer servicing of any vehicle manufacturer doing business in the US.

      Combine this with trying to sell a very high-end model with a brand known for decades for one thing: economy. OK, maybe two things. It has also been known for shoddy engineering and build quality in certain respects. Almost everyone who examined and tested it agreed that the Phaeton was an impressive piece of design, but the price was through the roof, and exceedingly few people in the US would even considered giving it a thought.

    3. Re:They did sell the Phateon here by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Serves them right for letting the stealership do non-warranty service. Idiots.

      Of course we knew that, they bought a VW.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    4. Re:They did sell the Phateon here by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I currently own an A8 that was taken for service both with the dealer and with others. The stuff done by the dealer was done right, but exorbitantly. The stuff done outside was also exorbitant, but done wrong. I mean, like, one of the places actually documented their putting Alumaseal in the system. Makes you want to choke someone. I wouldn't take a VAG product anywhere but a dealer or an actual expert. Like, there's "a guy" in Chicago who does the transmissions on these Audis. I'd go to him. A lot of people limp their car halfway across the country to have him rebuild their transmission. If you can make it there before the E basket goes completely, you're golden... Fucking ZF5HP42

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  27. and really high priced for a POS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When my mid 90s turbo Passat was in the shop (multiple times), they had the Phaeton in the showroom. I was struck by how expensive it was for something that wasn't very special (in comparison to other marques in a similar price range)

  28. Buy a VW electric? Not in this lifetime by sjbe · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Try making reliable electronic systems. I know of no one who's bought a VW made in the last 10 years who hasn't fought with electronic engine control system gremlins.

    10 years? Hell I owned a series of VWs from 1985-2003. (Scirocco, Golf, GTI, Jetta) My father owned several (3 Sciroccos, 2 Jettas, a Golf and a Passat plus Audi 5000) from 1977 to this year. My sister has owned several (Fox, Golf, Audi A3). EVERY single one of them save three, had electrical problems at one time or another. Usually something minor but sooner or later something electrical would break well before it should have been expected to break.

    VWs in my experience will last a long time but you can absolutely count on having them in the shop for one thing or another routinely. Electrical gremlins are routine and problem the most common problem I've run into. VW vehicles are durable but not especially reliable in my experience.

    So would I buy an electrical car from VW? HELL NO!

  29. Sigh by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > Phaeton

    Right. So what they're going to do is make yet another "Tesla killer" that sells to a few thousand rich people, and leave all the people that bought a Jetta in the cold. The net effect of this on overall emissions will be basically zero.

    Perhaps they would be better off spending this on making a diesel hybrid PEH drivetrain that could equip 80% of the cars they sell? This is a move that takes far less development, would cost less in real dollar terms, and would *drastically* reduce overall real-world emissions.

  30. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However in a lot of other places these cars do not violate the local standards.

    Doesn't matter. If it only had been about the legality of the vehicle they could just have pulled that model, it's a cost, but one that could be lived with.

    This is about saving the brand and the brand is hurt worldwide.
    You can't just act like an asshole in one market and expect that the customers in other countries will think that you probably play by the rules in otherwise.

  31. Diesel electric would be better by mschaffer · · Score: 1

    Rather than have diesel hybrid cars it would be better to have diesel electric cars.

    1. Re:Diesel electric would be better by goodmanj · · Score: 1

      What's the difference? I classify the "diesel electric" system used on trains, in which the engine turns a generator but delivers no direct power to the wheels, as just another sort of hybrid. An inferior sort, since directly powering the wheels can be more efficient at some points on the speed/power curve, so it's better to have that option.

    2. Re:Diesel electric would be better by Quimo · · Score: 1

      Railpower currently does offer a proper Hybrid. They call it the Green Goat (Goat being slang for a yard engine.) The first prototype went into use in 2001 so the superior type does exist.

    3. Re:Diesel electric would be better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is called a series hybrid.

    4. Re:Diesel electric would be better by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      The difference is that with a diesel-electric, as in trains, you can tune the engine / generator to run at optimum RPM at all times for fuel efficiency, and then vary the voltage going to the motors as a throttle. When using mechanical power from the engine to direct-drive wheels, you'll be changing the RPM and may not be as efficient on fuel.

      There's a lot of different variables that go into this kind of stuff, and the guys that make really big fucking diesel engines decided long ago that running the diesel at a constant, efficient RPM to generate electricity is a better way. Has that changed recently? I have no idea.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  32. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 2

    Volkswagen's fix will reduce the mileage on the cars that it's applied to. I wonder if VW owners are really going to line up at the garage to have the fix applied. Or will mandatory emissions testing force them to allow VW to apply the fix?

  33. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by beelsebob · · Score: 1

    VW's proposed fix has not been announced yet. All that's been announced is that it will require hardware changes (which the people saying it would reduce milage were assuming it would not).

  34. The e-Golf may be my next car... by jpellino · · Score: 1

    Inch for inch a Golf. 85 mile range. Down to USD$28K ($21K after the tax credit). For $500 Bosch comes and installs a fast charger in your garage. What's not to like?

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    1. Re: The e-Golf may be my next car... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's not to like is VW cars are plagued by electronic glitches and various faulty failing parts. Its a great business for dealership repairshops however!

    2. Re: The e-Golf may be my next car... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm, no. You may be confusing VW with Renault, Fiat or Opel here. I've never heard of a VW with electronic glitches.

    3. Re:The e-Golf may be my next car... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a compliance car. Which means the company is not committed to electric and doesn't care about producing a good EV
      http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/volkswagen-e-golf-ev-another-california-compliance-car/

    4. Re:The e-Golf may be my next car... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the history of electrical gremlins inherent to German cars, I concur....Buy one that is entirely electric.

    5. Re:The e-Golf may be my next car... by naris · · Score: 1

      What's not to like?

      Running out of charge in the middle of nowhere and having to get it towed back home BTW, the emissions of the tow truck will be pretty high so it could be argued that electric vehicles do have "emissions"....

  35. Power from hydrogen by sjbe · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am talking about hydrogen powered combustion engines, they produce more power than a gasoline engine.

    Did you actually read the article you linked to?
    Power: Hydrogen 80kW vs Gasoline 154kW
    Torque: Hydrogen 140Nm vs Gasoline 222Nm
    Range: Hydrogen 100 km vs Gasoline 550km

    When powered by hydrogen it is worse in each and every relevant measure. A LOT worse.

    1. Re:Power from hydrogen by Tighe_L · · Score: 1

      That is because it is using a smaller amount of fuel. The problem with hydrogen cars now is they are still using tanks to store hydrogen, so they make smaller tanks for the hydrogen and use less. Hydrogen has more energy per mass than gasoline. http://jalopnik.com/mazda-once... The future is storing hydrogen in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and using https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... to produce hydrogen.

    2. Re:Power from hydrogen by Tighe_L · · Score: 1

      To better explain, the issue with hydrogen is compressing and cooling a tank to keep hydrogen liquid is very heavy, that is why storing hydrogen in Magnesium hydride is attractive, first because it is non-volatile in that form, and you can store lot without a lot of weight. http://www.eia.gov/todayinener...

    3. Re:Power from hydrogen by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hydrogen has more energy per mass than gasoline.

      It has more energy per unit of mass (Specific Energy) but FAR less per unit of volume (Energy Density). So unless you plan on turning it into liquid hydrogen (impractical and dangerous) or can find some alternative storage medium, it's not practical as a fuel. The chemical storage mediums we've found so far are either lab experiments or impractical for various reasons.

      The future is storing hydrogen in magnesium hydride and using algae to produce hydrogen.

      And your evidence for this is what exactly? You are talking about a couple of laboratory projects. Nothing that is in any danger of becoming a commercial product any time soon. Your biological solution hasn't solved the key efficiency problem plus a host of other non-trivial issues. Your storage medium is not used in an commercial product that I am aware of.

      I have no principled objection to hydrogen powered vehicles but I think your optimism regarding their prospects as commercial products is unwarranted given the available evidence. If we do see commercial hydrogen powered vehicles it will not be at any kind of scale for many many years.

    4. Re:Power from hydrogen by Rei · · Score: 1

      The amount of fuel in the tank has no bearing on the power and torque. The same issue FYI happens in rocket motors - LOX/LH has the best ISP, but LOX/kerosene is generally much more powerful, so it's common to see LOX/kerosene on lower stages and LOX/LH on upper stages. Hydrogen's very low density hurts it in the power department, even though it's a very aggressive burner and powerful per unit mass. And of course the density hits it in the range department as well.

      Hydrogen adsorption materials increase range, but do so at the cost of consuming energy (at some stage or another) and increasing system mass.

      Anyway, the net cycle for hydrogen combustion, or even hydrogen fuel cells, is pretty terrible from an efficiency perspective. If you're starting with electricity... stick to electricity.

      --
      The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
    5. Re:Power from hydrogen by goodmanj · · Score: 2

      Hydrogen is stupid.

      The hydrogen engine *has* to be smaller and *has* to use less fuel, because if it carried enough fuel to match the power and range of a gasoline engine, the fuel tank would be as big as the car. (And that's not an exaggeration. OK not much. I did the math.)

      Hydrogen has great energy per mass, but its energy per *volume* is terrible -- about equal to lithium batteries. Rather than dealing with synthesizing, transporting, storing, and burning an explosive super-pressurized gas, it's much easier to just use electricity.

      Magnesium hydride doesn't help: since it stores only about 8% by weight of hydrogen gas, its energy per mass and per volume are both worse than compressed H2 gas. It might be safer, but it's not gonna solve the fuel tank problem.

    6. Re:Power from hydrogen by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Hydrogen adsorption materials increase range, but do so at the cost of consuming energy (at some stage or another) and increasing system mass.

      Indeed. When I looked at the issue, I kept running into the fact that in order to store a useful amount of hydrogen in a useful volume you end up back with low energy density by mass - because the high pressure tank weighs so much, and using absorption materials, as you say, only increase the mass by even more.

      Hydrogen was mostly dropped when Lithium-Ion battery technology didn't hit any road blocks. There's no critical show-stoppers for Lithium battery technology(and I'm being vague here because there's a range of chemistries and techniques here) except cost, and even that's been dropping.

      Efficiency: Charge efficiency for Lithium tends to be excellent, in the 90% range.
      Energy by mass: While taking about the same volume as a lead-acid battery of the same capacity, it's something like 20% of the weight
      Current capacity: It's capable of discharging fast
      Discharge tolerance: It's fine with being discharged to near empty.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    7. Re:Power from hydrogen by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      What, you don't want a cryogenic fuel system in every car on the road? What could possibly go wrong?

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    8. Re:Power from hydrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go wrong? I'm pretty sure being cryogenicly frozen in an accident so you can be safely thawed and healed in the hospital is far superior to being burned alive due to a ruptured tank of high explosives.

      Naturally there will be a few cases of people freezing solid then shattering into a million pieces like T2, but that'll be an outlier more than the norm, I'm sure.

    9. Re:Power from hydrogen by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      I want a car that runs on hydrazine.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  36. Isn't " ignorant and curious" the next Discovery by jpellino · · Score: 1

    Channel reality series? Oh, wait, that was done already - and ABC called it "Lost"

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  37. Cost and recharge times by sjbe · · Score: 1

    The only issue electric cars have now is the cost of the batteries.

    That is not the only problem though it is an important one. And that problem will be solved with scaled up production as you mention.

    The biggest problem electric vehicles have is refueling time and as a byproduct of that, range. They're making excellent progress on this but aren't quite there yet. I figure they either need to get the range up to 700+ miles with an under 1 hour recharge time or they need to get the recharge time to under 15 minutes with a 250 mile range. I think that is doable but it will be a few years before we're really there.

    1. Re:Cost and recharge times by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I don't think we need cars with a 700 mile range to make a huge impact on emissions. Most people I know very rarely travel over 300 miles in a day. I also know a lot of families with 2 or more cars. They never need both cars to have extremely long range. So if every house with 2 cars converted 1 of them to electric, there would still be a huge savings in emissions. There's also a lot of people who very rarely travel out of the city by car. They either fly or take the train. They also have the option of renting a gasoline car. It's going to be a long time before we completely phase out gas cars, just like we haven't completely phased out incandescent light bulbs, because they still have their uses. But we need to move forward to a point where a large number of new cars are using electric motors. Even having 20% of cars using electric would be a huge change from what we currently have.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Cost and recharge times by monkeyxpress · · Score: 1

      Sure but electric cars have one big card that they haven't really played yet - low running costs. As battery prices fall and we move more into normal-people cars (as opposed to wealthy first movers) this will become more and more apparent. Imagine now if you could get a Leaf for the same price as a petrol equivalent. For many people the fact that they could do all their normal commuting and have an extra $30-40 in their pockets each week to spend on something else will be extremely compelling. Add to this not having to do oil changes, and a car that could potentially last you for a decade without needing any more than tyre changes and you will have a lot of people interested.

      As others have said, electric cars won't be for everyone, but if we reach a tipping point where they are for, say 1/3 of people, that will be a massive disruption to the industry. I think that point can arrive long before they have range/refuelling equivalence with petrol technology.

    3. Re:Cost and recharge times by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Ridiculous. Virtually no one drives a car anything approaching 700 miles in a day. YAGNI.

      Eventually they may have those for the niche of people that drive 10 hours without a break. But to say that's needed for general adoption is moronic.

    4. Re: Cost and recharge times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      700 mile range is only needed by a very small percentage of users.

      We already have 250-300 miles range, with 30-45 min recharge. That's good enough for a very large portion of the population.

    5. Re: Cost and recharge times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      700 mile range is only needed by a very small percentage of users.

      Only those that go on holiday by car sometimes (i.e., the majority).

      We already have 250-300 miles range, with 30-45 min recharge

      But only with extremely large, heavy and expensive cars. While I can see the 'expensive' part getting better in the near future, the other two would require a revolution in battery technology. Meanwhile, any standard diesel car can easily manage 800km (and many more) on a single filling, can be filled up at every fuel station in less than five minutes, is a lot cheaper and it will outlast any battery pack. A petrol car has a somewhat smaller range, but it is still better than (almost) all electric cars and it has the same perks otherwise.

      I do agree that electric is the way to go in the future, but the batteries that would make an electric car truly competetive with diesel or petrol cars are not there yet.

  38. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't just act like an asshole in one market and expect that the customers in other countries will think that you probably play by the rules in otherwise.

    It works perfectly fine for all other manufacturers. The difference is that VW's reputation has been damaged heavily by the media, while others receive a very mild treatment for things that were far worse.

  39. Diesel electric by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Diesel hybrid is a nonsense.

    Really? Every locomotive in use today is a diesel electric hybrid. Frankly I think a diesel hybrid would make a lot of sense for many applications, particularly large trucks. Electric motors are great for around town stop/start traffic where diesels aren't so hot and diesels are great for steady state long distance driving (like highways) where electric motors aren't so hot. Their strengths are very complimentary.

    I know they exist, but still the whole hybrid jazz is about overcoming problems of petrol engine the diesel just does not have.

    Diesel engines are not *that* much different from gasoline engines.

    1. Re:Diesel electric by fraxinus-tree · · Score: 1

      Large trucks, locomotives and ships are another case. They are not "hybrids" in a sense of having batteries, they have electric transmission which is heavier and more complex but scales better and is more efficient than mechanic or hydro. For the locomotives and mine dumpers, it also brings the option to run on overhead electricity. As for petrol/diesel, they differ a lot. Enough to make a 20-40% difference in overall car efficiency. First of all, diesel engine is much more efficient at partial or near-idle load. Idle consumption of the same car is about 1.1l/h gasoline or 0.4l/h diesel. Diesel has better torque distribution. Adding the mass of the battery to a diesel car generally has more effect than optimizing the engine load.

    2. Re:Diesel electric by fnj · · Score: 1

      Really? Every locomotive in use today is a diesel electric hybrid.

      Oops. Incorrect. First of all, it's not "every" locomotive. There are many all-electric locomotives. 25% by length of the world railway network is electrified. 50% of all world railway transport is carried by electrical traction. More importantly, there are essentially NO hybrid locomotives at all, because the concept is stupid. The engine use profile is very different from automobiles. Diesel-electric locomotives are simply diesel-powered locomotives with an electric transmission.

      Hybrid by DEFINITION means "a vehicle that uses two or more distinct power sources to move the vehicle". For example, a Prius is capable of summing engine power plus battery power to drive the wheels. 100% of the power in a locomotive is sourced from the diesel engine. There are no batteries.

      For the rest, you are entirely correct. And indeed, there is work being done on developing diesel hybrid trucks.

    3. Re:Diesel electric by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      More importantly, there are essentially NO hybrid locomotives at all, because the concept is stupid.

      Uh-oh. You're about to say something stupid.

      Hybrid by DEFINITION means "a vehicle that uses two or more distinct power sources to move the vehicle".

      Yep. And in a series hybrid (see footnote) without battery storage like the typical diesel-electric locomotive, the first power source is the diesel fuel and the second power source is the output from the diesel engine. They are consumed by the diesel engine, and by the electrical generator set respectively. The output from the generator set is consumed by the traction motors.

      (footnote: note that my citation is actually a subheading of your citation. when you cite a page, you should probably be sure that you know what it says first, because otherwise you're going to look like a schmuck)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:Diesel electric by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Diesel hybrid is a nonsense.

      Really? Every locomotive in use today is a diesel electric hybrid.

      Factual errors in that statement aside, those locomotives don't carry more battery than they need to start. They do their motor braking through a carbon pile on the bottom of the locomotive. The cost of a big enough wad of batteries to be meaningful on a train is currently too large to be interesting. One situation doesn't really compare to the other.

      One problem with diesels is weight. Because they have higher cylinder pressures they still need thicker walls than gasoline engines. The other problem (and the larger one, really) is cost. Yes, really fancy-pants gasoline engines of today cost just as much (literally) as diesel engines because they have all the same parts, including a high-pressure fuel pump. But a cheap gasoline engine only efficient at cruising RPM and which doesn't have to have very much output is much cheaper than even a cheap diesel, and it's a hell of a lot lighter as well. That very same engine with only truly minor modifications is also an E100, E85, or even LPG/CNG engine.

      I think you're going to start to see series hybrids with relatively small amounts of battery (just enough for regen) crop up in more industrial applications, like garbage trucks and buses, although I hope more of them just go full-EV. It's easier to do meaningful regen when you have more battery.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Diesel electric by lewiscr · · Score: 1

      I could've sworn a local train that navigates a mountain pass had regenerative braking. I appear to be mistaken.

      Dynamic Braking (wikipedia link if you prefer) dissipates all of the electricity generated as heat. These trains are clearly referenced as engaging the dynamic braking system during a braking scare in the 90s, and not a regenerative braking system. A 2004 paper obtained dynamic braking data for this train line.

      For further evidence, I ran some informal youtube and google searches. There are no videos for "train regenerative braking", but a lot for "train dynamic braking". Google searches only turn up papers for "train regenerative braking", but "train dynamic braking" returns plenty of magazine articles and press releases .

  40. Should have been Audi, not VW by sjbe · · Score: 1

    The Phaeton was sold in the US when it was introduced. However, the sales of the $70K VW were not good so they decided to withdraw it from the US Market.

    That's because they sold it under the wrong brand. It should have been an Audi vehicle here in the US. NOBODY thinks of VW as a luxury brand. The Phaeton was a darn good car but VW flunked marketing 101 in selling it. The badge on the front matters when it comes to luxury vehicles. That's the same reason Toyota, Honda and Nissan sell their luxury stuff under Lexus, Acura and Infiniti brands here in the US.

    1. Re:Should have been Audi, not VW by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Phaeton was sold in the US when it was introduced. However, the sales of the $70K VW were not good so they decided to withdraw it from the US Market.

      That's because they sold it under the wrong brand. It should have been an Audi vehicle here in the US.

      No. It had no reason to exist at all. The Phaeton is the VW D1 platform. What many people don't realize is that VAG already had a D1 platform, the Audi V8. The Audi V8 was a fine car, if uninspiring. It was succeeded by the Audi D2 platform, known as the A8. It was offered both with the V8 and the W12 and has an all-Aluminum body. It is considered to this day to be one of the finest sports sedans conceived; the successors are either much heavier, or much, much heavier. To be fair, though, they also have even better power to weight ratios.

      Anybody who wanted a car like the Phaeton was much more likely to just go buy the A8, which offered all the same features and doesn't rust.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  41. Re:Buy a VW electric? Not in this lifetime by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    There's an old UK automotive joke: Why do the British drink warm beer? Because they keep it in Lucas refrigerators!"

  42. VW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unreliable money pit cars. The end.

  43. Oh no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I guess that I will have to drive my 15-year old Toyota truck, that still runs on the cheap, "dirty" 500 ppm diesel fuel, for a while longer.

  44. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Rei · · Score: 1

    Exactly what sort of fix are you envisioning that wouldn't reduce mileage? Do you really think they're going to find room to install an AdBlue system in your car?

    Unless you're talking about adding a post-treatment system, reducing emissions = lowering some combination of the combustion temperature or compression ratio = lower mileage and less power.

    --
    The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
  45. Optimization by sjbe · · Score: 1

    As for petrol/diesel, they differ a lot.

    Disagree. There are some important differences but the basic principles of operation are little different. Suck, squish, bang, blow. They mostly differ in what sort of operation they are optimal within. Little different than an Atkinson cycle engine versus an Otto cycle engine.

    Enough to make a 20-40% difference in overall car efficiency.

    40%? Show me one real world example of a car with a diesel getting 40% better fuel economy than a gasoline engine of similar horsepower in the same chassis. In the real world the fuel economy advantage tends to be 10-20% for any given power output. Diesel does have some advantages but let's not overstate it.

    First of all, diesel engine is much more efficient at partial or near-idle load. Idle consumption of the same car is about 1.1l/h gasoline or 0.4l/h diesel.

    Diesel is generally better at any steady state than most gasoline engines, not just idle. But much driving is not in steady state so the real world advantage is often less clear for many use cases.

    Diesel has better torque distribution. Adding the mass of the battery to a diesel car generally has more effect than optimizing the engine load.

    And electrics have still better torque distribution than diesel. Basically full torque immediately from a dead stop. Plus the electric motor provides additional power to deal with the battery weight.

    Let me put it to you this way. There is a reason the newest supercars are coming as hybrids. It allows them to optimize performance in ways that are not possible with gasoline or electric alone. It is very reasonable to suppose that there will be use cases where a diesel hybrid will make sense for exactly the same reasons.

  46. How is electric clean? by X10 · · Score: 1

    Electricity is generated in coal power plants, or in nuclear power plants. Those pollute.
    Also, recycling batteries is hard, and it pollutes. The sum of pollution over the lifecycle of an electric car may well be a lot worse than that of a gasoline car.

    --
    no, I don't have a sig
    1. Re:How is electric clean? by Socguy · · Score: 1

      In some places electricity generation is dirty. But it doesn't have to be. As renewable generations continues to accelerate, electric cars become cleaner and cleaner. They also provide interesting possibilities for symbiosis. Cars that can mop up the excess energy produced by variable generating systems like solar or wind when generation is high but cut back when low.

      Instead of discounting electric cars because some places use coal as part of their generation mix, why don't you advocate for the phase-out of coal generation?

    2. Re:How is electric clean? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Electricity is generated in coal power plants, or in nuclear power plants. These pollute.

      And in natural gas (low pollution), and some oil power plants. And you conveniently left out hydropower (zero pollution), wind power (zero pollution), solar power (zero pollution), and geothermal power (zero pollution). Nuclear "pollution" is practically zero compared to coal. Not counting accidents, nuclear "pollution" is practically zero. Coal power liberates into the environment vastly more radioactivity per GW per year than does nuclear. Contained waste is an issue rather different from liberation of pollution.

      The sum of pollution over the lifecycle of an electric car may well be a lot worse than that of a gasoline car.

      No it isn't.

    3. Re:How is electric clean? by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Actually, in the UK, electricity is increasingly produced by diesel generators, because they need backup power which can start fast when the wind drops.

      So the UK 'electric' VWs may well be diesel-powered after all, just with an extra layer of transmission losses on top.

    4. Re:How is electric clean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you conveniently left out hydropower (zero pollution), wind power (zero pollution), solar power (zero pollution), and geothermal power (zero pollution).

      Those things are all awesome, but none of them are "zero" pollution. There isn't any such thing as a zero-pollution energy source. Don't weaken a valid point with hyperbole, please.

    5. Re:How is electric clean? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Ha. I pay 1/10th the price of gas to get 100 percent green electricity from hydro, wind, and solar. I also own four solar panels. I work at one of the top five greenest universities in the World. I ride an all-electric all-green-power bus.

      Face it, the world's changing, Grandpa.

      We're leaving you with your 18th Century whale oil and kerosene lamps. Keep whining about buggy whips.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    6. Re:How is electric clean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity is generated in coal power plants, or in nuclear power plants. Those pollute.
      Also, recycling batteries is hard, and it pollutes. The sum of pollution over the lifecycle of an electric car may well be a lot worse than that of a gasoline car.

      the one thing that electric has over gasoline is that it really is a single point of regulation. Dirty smoke stacks can be retro fitted to be cleaner (when that tech is available). Only one installation has to be monitored and maintained whereas cars are in the million and don't always have compliant owners that maintain their vehicles.

      Note, I want a diesel car because I think it would be cool to grow algae that can be converted to bio diesel.

    7. Re:How is electric clean? by bentcd · · Score: 1

      The huge advantage of electric cars is that the mode of power generation for them is infinitely mutable, as decided on national policy level. If coal pollution is an issue it can easily be eliminated by shutting down the coal plants and building nuclear or hydro or whatever. You can't do this with gas powered cars because replacing all the millions of petrol power plants in people's cars is an impossible prospect as compared to replacing a few dozen regional power plants.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
  47. Swappable batteries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about just having stations with fully charged batteries that can be swapped in?

    1. Re:Swappable batteries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want someone else's battery.

      Anyway, the real solution is a smarter battery array: Expensive, small, quick-charging batteries that get you around town or at least home, coupled with cheap[er], large, slow-charging batteries for the longer excursions.

    2. Re:Swappable batteries by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      There might be situations where I do want someone else's battery.

      But in those situations, you don't want mine.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  48. Re:No doubt they can cheat on electric cars as wel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would a fine repair their image? All it does is line the pockets of those who receive the fine.

  49. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Tx · · Score: 1

    The cheat may not actually be necessary to comply with EU regulations, in which case the fix would just mean removing it. The VW exec that was questioned by parliament here recently stated that the fix would not reduce performance or fuel economy, so if they lied about that too, then VW are storing up even more trouble for themselves. But I'm for sure going to wait for confirmation before I let them "fix" my car.

    --
    Oh no... it's the future.
  50. Can't we just bankrupt them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a feeling if I had defrauded millions of customers for billions of dollars, I'd probably be bankrupted as a result. Aren't corporations people now?

  51. In-vehicle hydrogen power makes no economic sense by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    The sane way to use hydrogen, assuming it can be produced in large enough quantity and without enough pollution to compromise its other advantages, is to create it adjacent to, and then use to it drive, large power plants, which then pass the resulting energy along to vehicles as electricity. Electric vehicles offer something hydrogen vehicles cannot: they are energy agnostic, because you can make electricity in quite a few ways, none of which the electric vehicle even needs to know about, and from there, it's almost trivial to get the energy to most vehicles. Making hydrogen with a coal plant? That has to be most unfortunately indirect, and it just won't ever be practical. But an electric vehicle, today can run from a coal plant today, a nuke tomorrow, tidal when you go to the coast, and solar when you're in the south. Geothermal when you're cruising around Iceland. Etc. And hydrogen, if you build a hydrogen power plant.

    Transport and storage for hydrogen are severely problematic, there is no established infrastructure. The infrastructure for electric cars is already mostly in place. They can be plugged in at night when most generating facilities have considerable excess capacity available, and they'll be good to go for the mast majority of use cases, which will be short to moderate range. Furthermore, if the charging station is built with local storage, it can be accumulating energy when the vehicle isn't present and deliver it to the vehicle later, which will smooth the peak grid load out even further.

    Batteries are unlikely to be the long term energy storage of choice in vehicles, but for now, they're a cost-effective technology, and there's not much reason not to (continue to) go there. We can hope for ultracaps -- there are numerous signs of progress, but they're just not there yet -- but batteries will certainly do for now.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  52. Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So it turns out clean running efficient diesel was a fucking scam all along. Thank fucking god. Slashdot wank echo box would not shut the fuck up about diesel. "Why go electric or get a hybrid? That kills babies! Get this wonderful free market superman diesel that the evil gubmint wont let you own!"

    Seriously. The mental fucking gymnastics one has to go through to believe burning a low grade dirty fuel is better than gas.

    Turns out it's pure marketing wank. Much like clean coal.

    1. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by goodmanj · · Score: 1

      Yeah, this scandal is going to make VW rethink its plans to sell the new VW Smug, which was which was to be powered entirely by the driver's condescending attitude.

    2. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it turns out clean running efficient diesel was a fucking scam all along.

      No it does not. All that has turned out is that one type of diesel engine emits more of one specific type of pollutant than was claimed. Diesel engines in general are still a lot cleaner and more efficient than petrol engines.

      Seriously. The mental fucking gymnastics one has to go through to believe burning a low grade dirty fuel is better than gas.

      A dirty fuel like petrol you mean? Diesel is a *lot* cleaner than petrol. LPG is indeed even better, but it has been losing market share for the last twenty years due to high taxes, restrictions on the location of LPG-carrying petrol stations and lack of interest from car manufacturers.

    3. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Actually, biodiesel would be better in places like Wisconsin where most electricity comes from coal.

      Without cheating electronics, that is.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    4. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that would have only worked if the driver had also had a Tesla or an Alfa Romeo anyway.

    5. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Because VW is the only company that makes diesel engines.

      No, they are just the only ones that can't pass the CARB and EPA testing without cheating. Even if you just restrict to German manufacturers, BMW and Mercedes pass without issue, and without cheating.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    6. Re:Great. Can you morons STFU about diesel now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can, since some other VW engines do pass California emission tests without cheating.

  53. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Their design is a problem everywhere

    No it isn't. It is only a problem in urban areas with frequent inversions or poor wind flow. So it is a problem in Los Angeles and Denver. It is NOT a problem in rural areas, or even many urban areas. In those areas, the additional NOx is likely better than the environmental effect of the alternative higher fuel consumption and higher CO2 emissions.

    Instead of removing the "test-mode", they should instead tie it into the GPS and link it to weather reports. So if you are in Los Angeles on a calm day, the engine would automatically reduce NOx at the expense of burning more fuel. But if you are on I-80 in rural Nebraska, it would sip fuel and generate some extra NOx to fertilize the wheat fields.

  54. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by beelsebob · · Score: 1

    I would bet heavily that the solution is indeed that they'll find room to install an AdBlue system.

  55. Re:Buy a VW electric? Not in this lifetime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be fair, European-market Volkswagens tend to be built a lot better than their North-American market counterparts. VW is the market leader in Europe and older cars from VW and their sister brands are very common here. They are generally considerd to be among the most reliable and durable brands and they depreciate very slowly because of this reputation. That being said, VW has had their share of problems and I would definitely avoid some models from the 2008-2012 period.

    VW has always had trouble in North America, it seems. Americans are prepared to pay less for a new car and have very different preferences. VW has had trouble adjusting models to North-American tastes and requirements without losing too much of the original appeal of the car, but also with local production quality and continuity. However, German built cars are simply too expensive for the market segment they operate in.

  56. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Rei · · Score: 1

    I'd be surprised, it takes up a good bit of real estate in the vehicle...

    --
    The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
  57. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool story bro but...
    The law is the law dude. VW should not be above the law. I don't know what planet you are from but on the earth with winds and an atmosphere, emissions travel and can effect areas away from where they are actually being emitted from. I live in a rural area and had acid rain problems in the past. It's not from my fields.

  58. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that 'trust' isn't a US only issue.

    Car manufacturers makes sales based on trust. If I don't trust that this $30k+ thing I'm about to buy is going to do what it's supposed to, safely, and for a long time if maintained, I'm not going to buy it and I'll go across the street to that Honda dealer to buy a car that does essentially the same stuff, but is built by a company I do trust.

    That's the problem VW will ultimately deal with.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  59. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting idea, but there's something wrong with your post.

    I-80 is lined with 300+ miles of corn through Nebraska, not wheat. That's ethanol country. =)

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  60. I salute VW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I salute VW for doing what it could to subvert Leviathan Government's onerous regulations. Carry on, I say.

  61. All aboard! by Spinlock_1977 · · Score: 1

    My guess is that all the carmakers are involved (more here: http://geekcrumbs.com/2015/10/...). Wouldn't it be ironic if they all ended up guilty, and that was what finally provoked a massive shift to electric?

    --
    - The Kessel run is for nerf herders. I can circumnavigate the entire Central Finite Curve in a lot less than 12 parse
    1. Re:All aboard! by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that article has nothing of substance. Yes, companies do competitive research, but we already know that VW figured out how to detect when they were on a dyno (where other car manufacturers would also test) and turn on the lean NOx trap. If they tore it apart, they would find a lean NOx trap.

      Other manufacturers of diesel engines just sucked it up and licensed the Daimler urea-injection thing, and don't have these problems. VW was going to do that, and then decided not to. I guess they just preferred to cheat, do severe brand damage, lose billions of dollars worth of market cap, open themselves to class-action lawsuits from purchasers, and make themselves liable to billions more in fines.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    2. Re:All aboard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other manufacturers of diesel engines just sucked it up and licensed the Daimler urea-injection thing, and don't have these problems.

      They only started doing that very recently, on Euro 6 models. Most current diesel cars do not use urea injection. They use (cooled) EGR and/or an NOx adsorber (LNT), like in the affected VW models. Since it has already been shown that almost all current diesel cars (even some that use urea injection) emit far more NOx in real-world situations than they do in test conditions, and several manufacturers have been caught doing things similar to VW's "defeat device", I expect a few more manufacturers to get in trouble.

  62. Electric is clean! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many debunked zombie lies in one post... Why do right wing denier trolls keep repeating this over and over, and why are people so stupid to believe it?

    *Electricity is generated on my roof using my solar panels. It travels 25 feet to my EVSE with next to 0 transmission line loss.

    *Recycling batteries works, and is much easier than mining and creating new ones.

    *The pollution from generating a gallon of gas and putting it into your tank is worse than the electric pollution. Let alone the air pollution that ICE cars generate.

  63. Hybrids are the probable near term future by sjbe · · Score: 2

    You seem to be quite sure of this... I would question as to why?

    Several reasons.
    1) PHEVs require minimal to no infrastructure investment to be viable. No other alternative can make that claim.
    2) Fuel economy standards. PHEVs are a proven solution to the problem and the solution with the least compromise of performance.
    3) Prices of batteries continues to fall and performance continues to rise. As that happens the the price of hybrid vehicles will continue to improve.
    4) Performance and luxury cars already are beginning the conversion to hybrid. (See McClaren, Ferrari, BMW, Porsche, Lamborghini, etc)
    5) Internal combustion engines aren't going to get much better than they already are. We are well into diminishing returns on their performance.
    6) There are basically no other market-ready alternatives to improve performance. Not hydrogen, not natural gas, not pure-electric. Not yet.

    Well, they DO get a lot of press... but sales? Plug in EVs of all types were less than 1% of the total light car and truck sales in the US in 2014 (it was 0.7% to be exact).

    Find me another alternative fuel vehicle type that has even close to the market uptake that hybrids have. Hybrids are still relatively pricey so it's not surprising that they will take some time to gather market share but they ARE gaining market share. And they are selling. In Japan the Toyota Prius is currently the #2 selling vehicle and has been near the top for years. They're not going to take over the market tomorrow but they will become very commonplace over the next 10-15 years.

    That is a rounding error, not the "coming replacement of ICE cars".

    That's like saying in 1978 that personal computers are a rounding error in computer sales. It's true but it misses the point of what will happen next. Hybrids are still new and fairly expensive. But car companies will HAVE to start pushing hybrids or they will have to greatly lower the power of the vehicles they sell to meet fuel economy standards. I think the former is far more likely than the later. There is no other market ready alternative available to them. You're particularly going to see hybrids becoming standard equipment on luxury cars first and then working down the food chain into mass market cars as costs fall. It will take some years but I don't see any credible scenario where hybrids don't grab big market share.

  64. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    I-80 is lined with 300+ miles of corn through Nebraska, not wheat. That's ethanol country. =)

    From Omaha to the Wyoming border, I-80 is in Nebraska for 455 miles. In eastern Nebraska it is mostly lined with cornfields. But as you go west into the drier regions, you will begin to see more wheat and less corn. By the time you reach the Wyoming border, it will be mostly wheat or pasture. But NOx emissions will help any crop. Even nitrogen fixing legumes like soybeans will benefit.

  65. Suspect reliability by sjbe · · Score: 1

    To be fair, European-market Volkswagens tend to be built a lot better than their North-American market counterparts.

    I've owned plenty of VWs that were built in Europe and I stand by my statement that their reliability isn't good. I don't think the boat ride reduces reliability so I'm unconvinced that VWs quality problems are anything but engineering and occasionally build defects in most cases. I've seen no evidence that VWs built on this side of the pond are less reliable than those build in Germany. Honda and Toyota and BMW and others manage to build very reliable cars here in North America so VW doesn't have any excuse.

    They are generally considerd to be among the most reliable and durable brands and they depreciate very slowly because of this reputation.

    I have never seen a single quality survey in the last 20 years where VW was not near the bottom of the heap. Durable I would agree with from personal experience. Reliable? No way. The data simply doesn't support that assertion.

    Americans are prepared to pay less for a new car and have very different preferences.

    VW overcharges for their vehicles. Why would I pay more for a vehicle from a company with a deservedly bad reputation for reliability? The Jetta is a decent enough car but it's not better than a half a dozen of its competitors. If VW cannot be bothered to listen to local preferences and cannot fix the reliability issues then it should surprise no one that their sales aren't going to be amazing.

    VW has had trouble adjusting models to North-American tastes and requirements without losing too much of the original appeal of the car, but also with local production quality and continuity.

    True but that's just arrogance on their part. I've owned a lot of VWs over the years and some of their design decisions are baffling. Other manufacturers manage the trick so what's VW's excuse?

    1. Re:Suspect reliability by emm-tee · · Score: 1

      I have never seen a single quality survey in the last 20 years where VW was not near the bottom of the heap. Durable I would agree with from personal experience. Reliable? No way. The data simply doesn't support that assertion.

      You must not have been looking at the same quality surveys then.. 6 out of the top 10 car models in this satisfaction survey from last year are VW or one of its brands (Skoda):

      http://www.whatcar.com/car-news/2014-jd-power-survey-volkswagen-big-winner/1296353

      Even the lowest scoring VW is still mid-table

  66. STOP TALKING by Gliscameria · · Score: 1

    My goodness VW. You got caught cheating, mad people are still mad... now just stop talking for a while. Nothing you say is going to be seen positively in the near future.

    --
    X
  67. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

    Volkswagen's fix will reduce the mileage on the cars that it's applied to. I wonder if VW owners are really going to line up at the garage to have the fix applied. Or will mandatory emissions testing force them to allow VW to apply the fix?

    If it were MY car, I'd not take it in for the "fix" either just for that reason...reduction in performance and mileage.

    Thankfully, not everyone lives in a state that requires an emissions test....or even auto inspections at ALL.

    :)

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  68. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

    It is a world-wide problem. Granted that there are some nations that don't enforce pollution laws and likely some that don't even have any. But the EU, Canada and others are very interested in this.

    The real irony is that after being caught in a huge lie about their diesel engines they think that they can focus on electric cars and the public will believe all the lies they tell about their electric cars.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  69. And tests show.... by dskoll · · Score: 1

    Tests conducted by VW showed that their electric cars actually have negative emissions, leaving the air cleaner than it was before they drove through.

  70. All your fossil fuel vehicles are belong to 20th by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    All your fossil fuel vehicles are belong to the 20th Century.

    Wake up, it's the 21st.

    Adapt or die.

    Nobody cares about your excuses.

    Batteries are cheap, solar is cheaper than coal, wind is cheap, stop whining grandpa!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  71. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

    Plenty of room in the passenger seat.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  72. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would you trust Honda over VW when Honda has done worse things?

  73. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    New cars sales are based on ego, not trust.

    If they can convince you that a new VW will get you laid, you will buy one.

    See also Ferrari. Terrible cars cynically sold to customers regarded as full idiots by the manufacturer. But they will get you laid.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  74. Re:Buy a VW electric? Not in this lifetime by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Don't try to tell that to my German relatives.

    One thing we always have to talk about, how terrible new VWs are, there or here.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  75. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by KGIII · · Score: 1

    While this is true, have you ever been to Florida and seen how comical the results are? I've seen the great big swamp buggies, the platform type, going down 98 in PCB with a stack of students on the back drinking margaritas. They call it "FAG week" during Spring Break. FAG is Florida, Alabama, and Georgia. The results of these uninspected vehicles is quite comical - I've even seen a car with no driver's side door. Though, I think they can stop and take that off the road. They didn't. It was Florida, after all.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  76. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know what's so bad about that. Sounds like it would remove morons from the gene pool.

  77. Satisfaction != Reliability by sjbe · · Score: 1

    You must not have been looking at the same quality surveys then.. 6 out of the top 10 car models in this satisfaction survey from last year are VW or one of its brands (Skoda):

    You right I wasn't. I was looking at ones that measure RELIABILITY like this which have VW firmly in the bottom half. Same deal with Consumer Reports and plenty of others. The survey you cited measures customer satisfaction, not reliability. Very different. (Plus how do you get 6 of the top 10 and still not manage to be the top brand?)

  78. Magnesium hydride by sjbe · · Score: 1

    the issue with hydrogen is compressing and cooling a tank to keep hydrogen liquid is very heavy, that is why storing hydrogen in Magnesium hydride is attractive,

    Magnisium hydride is just 8% hydrogen by mass. You have to tote around a huge amount of heavy magnesium so you lose whatever advantage in specific energy you had with hydrogen. No, that will most certainly NOT be the solution because it isn't any better than existing batteries.

  79. Re:Buy a VW electric? Not in this lifetime by KGIII · · Score: 1

    If you had all those problems with that brand, an expensive and extensive problem spanning multiple vehicles, then why did you keep buying that brand? I'm not sure we should accept your reasoning as you're clearly telling us that you're unreasonable. I do own a sort-of-rare VW. I have what is known as a Quantum 5 wagon and it's fun but I don't take it out as much as I should. I don't think it has been on the road in the past year. I kind of feel sorry for it - it needs to be driven.

    The only issue I had was brakes, rear, and the parts were in short supply so it took some time for my mechanic to get it resolved.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  80. Re: Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Important to note however, if milage is reduced it will probably not be worse than advertised - since the advertised numbers comes from tests with the cheat mode active.

  81. lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other words, they'll actually do what they're required by law to do, but vehicle prices will jump significantly.

    That's the stupidest thing I've read today. The diesel VW's already have the requisite hardware to pass the emissions tests, thus they're actually being able to pass the emissions tests. No hardware change is required to make them compliant when out on the open road as well, it's just a software update.

  82. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem - NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is rather "known" in German auto industry for having cars that perform on par (e.g. VW Sharan vs Ford S-Max) yet are regarded as way better cars by many journalists "for some reason".

    Have a drive both in a 20 year old VW and in a 20 year old Ford (if you can find one) and you will know the reason. Of course, this mostly says something about the cars VW and Ford made twenty years ago, but people tend to extrapolate past experience into the present.

  83. They should open source their programs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should open source their programs.

  84. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    I don't know what's so bad about that. Sounds like it would remove morons from the gene pool.

    The problem with driving un-roadworthy cars is that when your brakes fail and the wheels drop off, you are likely to involve someonw else in the ensuing accident.

    It's one of those areas where libertarianism doesn't really work. If my family are killed by a driver of a dangerous vehicle, I really don't care that I can sue him. Prevention is better than cure, even if it does involve impinging on his freedom.

    tl;dr you have the right to kill yourself, not other people

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  85. Re:Fixing an ostensibly US only problem by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    New cars sales are based on ego, not trust.

    If they can convince you that a new VW will get you laid, you will buy one.

    See also Ferrari. Terrible cars cynically sold to customers regarded as full idiots by the manufacturer. But they will get you laid.

    If you see someone in a Ferrari, you can reasonably assume they have more money than sense. This will attract a certain sort of person, but in that case why not just buy a Fiat Panda and spend the money on high class prostitutes instead?

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  86. Longer time to recharge = longer range required by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Virtually no one drives a car anything approaching 700 miles in a day.

    Has nothing to do with driving 700 miles in a day. It has to do with time required to refuel. The longer it takes to refuel the longer the range on electric vehicles will have to be to make them practical for long distance travel. Don't get too wrapped up in the exact numbers - those are just guesses anyway. If it takes 2 hours to recharge your car, you're not going to want to do that daily if you are away from home. It's too inconvenient. If it is just 15 minutes your range can be less because the drive time to refuel time ratio is smaller. So you'll want enough range that you don't have to worry about it. Maybe that number is 500, maybe it is 800. Doesn't really matter. We're already seeing early prototypes of commercial EVs with over 400 mile ranges and Tesla has been talking about ranges long and more than that in the not distant future.

    1. Re:Longer time to recharge = longer range required by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      If you're away at a hotel, then they'll have chargers. It you're away staying at someone's home then it'll charge overnight from a domestic power socket.

      (OK not all hotels have chargers yet. But they will soon enough, just as they all have wifi, because they'll lose trade without it.)

    2. Re:Longer time to recharge = longer range required by sjbe · · Score: 1

      If you're away at a hotel, then they'll have chargers.

      Someday hopefully but that day is years in the future. Until then we'll have to do things similar to how we do them now. I think the infrastructure build out can be relatively gradual fortunately.

      It you're away staying at someone's home then it'll charge overnight from a domestic power socket.

      If they are ok with that. Doesn't work if they live in an apartment or someplace like Manhattan.

      (OK not all hotels have chargers yet. But they will soon enough, just as they all have wifi, because they'll lose trade without it.)

      Not really the same. Wifi can be added to a hotel pretty easily by comparison. Charging stations are FAR more expensive and require ripping up pavement in a lot of cases. I think in the long term you are right but we're probably talking 10-15 years from now minimum for widespread uptake.

    3. Re:Longer time to recharge = longer range required by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Someday hopefully but that day is years in the future. Until then we'll have to do things similar to how we do them now.

      No. Clearly those with EVs will chose the minority of hotels that do have chargers. And that's what will propel others to have chargers. Normal market forces, exactly as panned out with wi-fi, TVS and en-suite bathrooms before them.

      It won't take that long because the entry level charger for the family motel/hotel is cheap. It's an unmetered external power socket with a locked cover. It's a slow charge, but because it's overnight that doesn't matter. That's happening already in my country. And chains of hotels have energy companies and the likes of Tesla willing to do deals and pay all or part of the cost of proper public charging stations.

      Doesn't work if they live in an apartment or someplace like Manhattan.

      In Manhattan, you've got a parking problem even if you're in an ICE car. Parking garages likewise are going to increasingly have EV chargers.

  87. Hand-me-downs by sjbe · · Score: 1

    If you had all those problems with that brand, an expensive and extensive problem spanning multiple vehicles, then why did you keep buying that brand?

    I didn't. The vehicles were mostly hand me down vehicles (or family deals) from family members who were VW enthusiasts. (my father particularly) I didn't have enough money at the time to be especially choosy. And to be fair they were generally pretty good vehicles aside from spending more time in the shop than I prefer. I have particularly fond memories of my 85 Scirocco which was a pretty fun car to drive. Of course once I had enough money to buy my own vehicles I haven't touched a VW since. My recent purchases were Honda, Nissan, Mercedes, Saturn, Ford. The only VWs that piqued my interest at all were (ironically) the diesels and that was mostly for the engine rather than the rest of the car.

    I do own a sort-of-rare VW. I have what is known as a Quantum 5 wagon and it's fun but I don't take it out as much as I should

    That's just another badge for an early version of the second gen Passat. Was badged the Quantum in North America but it was a Passat or a Santana in other markets. I kept my Scirocco far longer than I should have for similar reasons. Eventually the brakes froze like they will with any vehicles that sits too long and I sold it.

  88. Re:No doubt they can cheat on electric cars as wel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A company agreeing to pay fines without excessive legal wrangling would be nice to see for once. It makes the admission of guilt slightly more credible.