Informal survey
Nov. 19th, 2008 09:25 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I was contemplating the general castigation current on the auto industry, bemoaning "Detroit's" pig-headed management decision to concentrate on pickup truck and SUV production and letting Japan steal the small car market. And then, as I walked to fetch the newspaper and back, I counted passing vehicles.
Over half the traffic on State Street consisted of light trucks and SUVs. Usual carrying one person, the driver, and with no visible cargo. Folks, "Detroit" was producing those dinosaurs because that was what the American Driver wanted to buy . . .
I'm old enough to remember small cars like the Nash Metropolitan, the Henry J, the Ford Falcon. "Detroit" has tried to produce small, fuel-efficient cars through the decades. They've flopped in the market. Instead, we bought highway battleships like my family's 1957 Oldsmobile, with a big V-8 engine and automatic transmission.
Or a Ford Expedition. What percentage of SUVs ever leave the pavement, except in an accident?
Over half the traffic on State Street consisted of light trucks and SUVs. Usual carrying one person, the driver, and with no visible cargo. Folks, "Detroit" was producing those dinosaurs because that was what the American Driver wanted to buy . . .
I'm old enough to remember small cars like the Nash Metropolitan, the Henry J, the Ford Falcon. "Detroit" has tried to produce small, fuel-efficient cars through the decades. They've flopped in the market. Instead, we bought highway battleships like my family's 1957 Oldsmobile, with a big V-8 engine and automatic transmission.
Or a Ford Expedition. What percentage of SUVs ever leave the pavement, except in an accident?
no subject
Date: 2008-11-19 03:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-19 03:45 pm (UTC)Up until this summer, the Prius and other hybrids were niche cars selling to people who cared more about the environment than about cost, like one of Wife's coworkers at the Nature Center. Even with orders in hand, Toyota hasn't been able to ramp up production to meet demand. And now people are post-market modifying them for plug-in use, because the factory model isn't efficient enough . . .
I get over 30 mpg on highway driving. And drive 3000-4000 miles per year. Boosting that mileage to 60 or even 100 mpg would save how many gallons of gas? For how much additional first cost?
no subject
Date: 2008-11-20 03:55 am (UTC)