Alternatives to Hybrid Cars
Hybrid cars are considered by many to be the thinking
driver’s solution to the current global warming debate. They
are fuel-efficient and produce a great deal less emissions than
their conventionally powered counterparts. At the present they
are gaining greatly in popularity due to a variety of
factors.
It is very trendy to be seen driving hybrid cars; it
displays your green credentials to the world. It also saves you
a great deal on the cost of your fuel. This is especially
relevant for drivers, who cover high mileages, but less so if
the mileage is small or you change your car frequently. This is
due to the high cost of purchase. And of course you may be able
to save us all from a global catastrophe, always a point worth
mentioning at dinner parties. But are the present gas electric
hybrid cars the best and most efficient way of saving the
environment, and your money, or is there a better option?
The new breed of diesel cars that burn their fuel very
cleanly and efficiently are way ahead of some hybrid cars in
the fuel economy stakes. Mostly produced by European
manufacturers they give huge cost savings over standard diesel
engine cars and even more so over gas cars. These clean burn
diesel cars can give as much as 90mpg (which is at least as
good or better than the best of the Hybrid cars can achieve),
and also offer low emissions through more efficient fuel
combustion. American manufacturers such as Jeep are now
producing this new generation of diesel cars and are catching
up with their European counterparts.
One of the latest innovations in this field is a hydraulic
hybrid car. These are not too dissimilar in their basic
principle to standard hybrid cars. The main difference is that
they use a hydraulic accumulator to store energy via nitrogen
gas, which is then compressed by a hydrogen motor and is used
to power the vehicle through a hydraulic drive train, which
also replaces a standard transmission. These two vital
differences not only make it extremely efficient but also
cheaper to produce than normal hybrid cars.
These differences could result not only in a lower purchase
price, which until now had been one of the major stumbling
blocks, but also considerable saving in fuel costs. In fact
savings could be in the region of 30-40 per cent, with the
highest savings being from vehicles that are mainly used in the
urban environment. These new type of hybrid cars are still in
development but, if shown to be practical and reliable, could
easily supersede the current gas electric hybrid cars that are
currently in production.
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