Mole wrote:
Rush, maybe you can enlighten me?! I read the hypermiling stuff with a mixture of interest and bemusement.
Maybe; I can definitely answer your questions, though.
Quote:
What is it about Americans and diesel cars?! If these guys want to get 60MPG - even 60 MPG IMPERIAL! - ll they need to do is go out and buy a diesel car! I've never really understood why the Prius was a petrol-electric hybrid because all that technology made it only just (in the right circumstances!) about as good as the equivalent diesel engined car.
Don't get me wrong, I happen to LIKE petrol cars because they sound and feel nicer. But I have a diesel as my everyday transport because I just can't ignore the savings to be had. Diesels are getting better (in terms of refinement) by the year and these days, other than having a rev counter with smaller numbers on it, there's little to choose between the best ones and their petrol counterparts. Certainly if I was bothered about maximising fuel economy, I'd switch to diesel LONG before I tried some of the ridiculous stunts those guys seem to be resorting to!
Keep in mind that during the 40s, 50s, and 60s, Amerikan cars were fueled by gasoline that was either nearly as, or actually cheaper than just about any other liquid commodity I can think of. Even back in those days, most other countries paid more for fuel out of the pump than did Amerika. With gasoline so inexpensive for us, and less incentive to care about the environment at the time, why settle for a noisy, smoke belching vehicle that was so hard to start when cold?
To whatever extent that was actually true, the perception of diesel fuel was as a 'heavyduty' fuel, primarily for work vehicles. That, and the math simply didn't work out when weighed against diesel's drawbacks, perceived and real, which were both exaggerated by what the Amerikan auto industry provided its citizenry. (I know that European makers in Amerika sold many more diesel-optioned models than GM, FoMoCo, and ChrysCo., especially after the 70s, when fuel availability and cost became an issue.)
Quote:
Just as an "aside", I'm intrigued about the "ridge riding" thing. Over here, if you did that on most of our roads, you'd be hitting all the grids, manhole covets and potholes with your nearside tyres. That all uses energy - bashing the suspension up and down like that and then disipating it as heat in the dampers! Are the nearside edges of the road a lot smoother over there? I take the point about driving in the wet, but even then, I'd have thought that when following other vehicles, it would actually be better to keep your wheels on the part of the road that had been "squeegeed" dry by the preceding car(s)?
By the way, I forgot the linkie. Here ya go:
Wayne Gerdes explains the basics of hypermiling.
I don't know how to provide the link to this picture, but if you care to take a look, try using maps.google.com, go to Lefrak City, Queens, NY, and drag that guy onto the Long Island Expressway so that he's between 93rd and 94th Streets.
Note that it is always at least three lanes wide, and that that usually does not include the shoulder.
When it rains, each lane features two puddles about an inch or so deep, and miles long, formed by the pressure of each car's tires passing over essentially the same path, as drivers tend to center themselves in their lanes.
Rain or shine, good hypermilers almost never center themselves in a lane (even when there is only one). Instead, they [usually] move their passengerside towards or over the painted lines, depending on their level of skill and experience, both to avoid the ruts - especially when they are filled with water - and to encourage passing. (Remember, hypermilers almost never wind up in, much less stay in, the passing lane.)
If instead, you managed to move the guy onto Horace Harding Expressway, which is the Long Island Expressway's local service road in Queens, you'll find after studying that path for a while, that we tend to put the drainage ditches on either edge, and the manhole covers pretty much anywhere; whereas the potholes tend to form where the tires have been putting their cumulative pressures - right between the dead center of a lane, and the painted lines.
For what it's worth, hypermiling never really got a foothold in New York City. The lower the automotive population density, the more likely you are to find hypermilers.