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Loremo [car / toy] - 157mpg

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Loremo [car / toy] - 157mpg

Unread postby J-Rod » Sat 25 Feb 2006, 21:54:09

Loremo

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Sign me up! I mean sure, I'd have to go for the GT version, as 0-100kph in 19 seconds just isn't cutting it, but I can deal with 9.

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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby Novus » Sat 25 Feb 2006, 23:31:21

That is basically an expensive toy and probably not steet leagal in the US but what else is new. Bottom line is it will never be produced in large enough numbers to have an impact on PO. Even if they had been producing these cars ten years ago and there were millions of them on the road today it would only delay the effects of PO for a decade at most. The spralling suburbs and the global economy that support them are ultimately unsustainable and no amount of super efficient cars will ever change that.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby The_Toecutter » Sat 25 Feb 2006, 23:46:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat is basically an expensive toy and probably not steet leagal in the US but what else is new.


Did you not read the article? Apparently starting at $11,000 Euros, or about $13,000USD.

It remains to be seen whether the company will deliver on its promise, but everything seems plausible in theory. This technology is by no means new or untested.

Street legal in the U.S.? Maybe. If anything, the oil whoring government might outlaw them just to keep them off the roads, like they did to the limited number of Citroen, Renault, and Pugeot electrics Europeans used to have access to.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ottom line is it will never be produced in large enough numbers to have an impact on PO.


Depends on when peak oil hits. If they are made and sold just at the start of the peak, the rate at which the fleet turns over, about 7% a year, may be enough to more than offset the decline, if and only if cars like these become the norm. Keep in mind that automobile fuel is 40% of America's oil consumption. Addressing the fuel consumption issue(along with reducing auto dependence in its entirity) certainly can have a major impact, the trick is doing so before the effects of peak oil set in and render such a prospect economically infeasible.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')ven if they had been producing these cars ten years ago and there were millions of them on the road today it would only delay the effects of PO for a decade at most.


Say not 150 mpg, but instead 60 mpg started to become in demand 10 years ago in 1996. It takes the auto fleet 15 years to turn over, or about 7% of on road cars per year. 40% of oil is consumed in automobile fuel today, or about 32 bpd. Switching the entire fleet to a mere 60 mpg fuel economy average from 22.5 mpg, would bring this down to 12 bpd.

Today, assuming 60 mpg cars are now 67% of our fleet due to the 15 year fleet turnover rate beginning in 1996, we'd be consuming 18.7 bpd for auto fuel, instead of 32 bpd.

So that would drop total oil consumption to 66.7 bbd. A drop of 17% over today! This is such a significant drop in consumption as to significantly delay peak, more than enough time for a full adoption of renewables to be set in place. With a 3% decline rate post peak, it will take 6 years for oil production to drop 17% from what it was if peak were today. Further, we'd have saved over 3 years worth of oil, so that's at least 9 more years to implement a solution, half of what the Hirsch report specified was needed to mitigate the effects of peak oil.

That would have been a very good start, halfway to a solution.

150 mpg? We'd have definately made plenty of time to scale renewables up. n the order of 15 years.



The problem is, we didn't do that. The oil industry wanted immediate short term profits, so did the auto industry, so did the utility industry. It was status quo, gas guzzling SUVs, oil wars, dirty coal electricity, and not efficient cars and EVs, addressing poverty, or clean wind and solar electricity... TPTB chose unfettered growth over sustainability and smaller government, and the people will pay the price.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he spralling suburbs and the global economy that support them are ultimately unsustainable and no amount of super efficient cars will ever change that.


Agreed. But super efficient cars go contrary to maximizing growth, and if the subsidies for suburban living were eliminated, it wouldn't be nearly as attractive. Cars and suburbs may support each other today, but the two things can and have survived without the other. Suburbs and sprawl were present when America had mass transit and before the autos took hold in the early 1900s. People commuted by trolley. It wasn't until after WWII that America's sprawl increased in size with the government taxing city dwellers to encourage buying more homes, and it was not the suburbs that spurred auto dependence, it was the oil and auto industries buying out all of America's light rail systems and dismantling them, that encouraged car buying. Tearing down the trolleys in Cleveland, St. Louis, Los Angeles, and Salt Lake City caused riots. 1/3 of those who were driving age had a car then, and they only needed to drive about 5,000 miles per year.

The government wanted rapid economic growth, and to achieve that goal they encouraged sprawl and forced auto dependence by allowing the mass transit to be torn down. Billions of tax dollars went to highway bills and tax rebates for home purchases as city dwellers footed the bill. Increasing consumption made various industries and the government money, and that is why we are in this situation today. Big government and industry doesn't want to give those excessive revenues up! Joe American simply followed what was easiest, living the subsidized American dream on someone else's dime, as opposed to being those suckers forced to foot the bill.

Forward to the present. 1 car for every person of driving age in America, 12,000 miles per year per car. Pathetic excuse for mass transit. Riding a bike is now dangerous, with cities having outlawed people from riding them on sidewalks.

Now comes peak oil. Who will pay the piper? Will industry give up its desire for unending growth in a world of limited resources? Will government transfer power away from itself? It could happen, but if it doesn't, this what will be our doom. Pigs will probably fly first anyway, unless there is massive public outcry resulting in ousting the politicians by whatever means necessary. Again unlikely.








157 mpg is very plausable. A car like this would only need about 6 horsepower at the wheels to cruise at 60 mph, considering it can apparently hit 100 mph with a 20 horsepower engine. I ran through a little math and calculated that this car would need 17 rear wheel horsepower to go 100 mph, assuming low rolling resistance tires with about a .006 Cr, so 20 horsepower engine and 160 km/h is doable with properly selected gear ratios.

If you work through the math, it makes a lot of sense. The largest culprit in fuel consumption is the aerodynamic drag, a factor affected by the drag coefficient and frontal area of the vehicle, both very small, along with the speed of the vehicle and outside air speed/direction/pressure. 12.8 square foot frontal area, .20 coefficient drag, yielding a Cd*A of 2.56! That is crazy low, with most cars having about a .35 drag coefficient and about a 25 square foot frontal area. Weight is also significantly low, 1,035 pounds. With some low rolling resistance tires having a .006 Cr, the car's rolling force might only be about 6.5 pounds or so at highway speeds!

This is the type of car we could have done 15-20 years ago, but the major players in the auto industry don't want people driving around in such clean, low maintenance vehicles, nor does the oil industry want to compromise 40% of its market: automobile fuel. I hope this is not a bunch of hype and is a real product, as from a mathematical standpoint, the numbers add up perfectly. Further, similar cars to it have already been made as prototypes.

Opel made a concept car called the Eco Speedster back in 2003. 112 horsepower 3-cylinder turbodiesel, 1,400 pound vehicle weight, .20 drag coefficient, 15.8 square foot frontal area. It got 97 miles per American gallon fuel economy and topped 160 mph. Unlike Leremo, the Eco Speedster was a race car. It was fast, 0-60 mph around 6 seconds.

This appears to take after the Eco Speedster, only lighter, smaller, and capable of seating 4.

Hell, 20 horsepower may not be much for a car, but 157 miles per American gallon is. Considering Americans wouldn't accept that low level of performance 20 horsepower can provide, we could still make due with the 50 horsepower version and 0-60 mph in 9 seconds, this performance being slightly above average among the American auto fleet, and we'd still see 90 mpg from it. For < $18,000 USD, there'd certainly be a market for that, even in gas guzzling America. Toyota can't even keep the more expensive Prii in stock and there is a waiting list months long to buy one!

It is said that biofuels can replace about 20% of our automobile oil consumption without severely encroaching on the environment. Well, a 90 mpg fleet fuel economy average would certainly allow us to achieve that, assuming 12,000 miles per year per car. Albeit keeping the current level of car use as today would be stupid, as people want options besides cars to get around, and I don't blame them one bit. Plus we'll need those biofuels to replace oil for plastics, machine oils, heating, ect.

While it's again comforting to know the tech for efficient cars is here, it's disheartening we're still not using this technology, just for the sake of lining oil industry profits with our wasteful oil consumption. If we reduce oil consumption and leave a huge unused surplus, the oil industry would no longer make their record profits, governments would lose oil tax revenue, and less money would be placed into the economy causing negative growth. The power elite doesn't want negative growth, as it relies on constant positive growth for profit.

2009 is a bit far off to have a major effect on PO, unfortunately, but should peak oil come later than we expect, this deomonstration of technology could have an impact.

I'm hoping Loremo actually produces and sells this car and that it's not all hype, and does so without interference from the oilies or tax dependent governments. But knowing history, that is not something I'd bet on.


This would also make an awesome electric car would someone convert one, negating the need for liquid fuels, even biofuels.

Removing all the IC related components is probably about 200 pounds or so eliminated.

With a simple lead acid battery pack, having a dismal specific capacity of 30 wh/kg(versus gasoline at over 12,000 wh/kg), it would be possible to make a pure electric car, capable of seating 4 people, with 150 miles range at 60 mph, top speed over 150 mph, 0-60 mph < 5 seconds, and a price tag of under $30,000, *without* volume production of the EV components. To get a car with that performance will usually run you at $50,000-80,000.

I imagine converting one to these specs might look like the following:

-Netgain WarP Impulse 8'' series DC motor x2 $2,800
-Exide Orbital AGM lead acid battery x29 $2,900
-Cafe electric Zilla Controller(72-348V DC, 1,000 amp max, reversing and series/parallel contact control, Hall effect pedal input) x1 $2,900
-Manzanita Micro PFC 30 Charger x1 $1,800
-Todd DC-DC converter x1 $400
-Steel for battery racks $50
-Battery Cable $50
-EV200AAANA contactors x1 $75
-Feraz Shawmut A50QS400-4 fuse x2 $109
-E-Meter x1 $235
-Solid-State Ceramic Heater Core x1 $75
-Adaptor Plate x1 $1000
-Miscallaneous components(Heat shrink tubing, tools, ect.) $500
-Manzanita Micro Rudman Battery Regulators x29 $1,450
-Loremo LS $13,000

Total: $27,344.

This car would have about 150 miles range at 60 mph to full battery discharge, and consume a mere 100 wh/mile at 60 mph. 33,800 wh of energy in a gallon of gasoline, that's the energy efficiency equivalent of 338 miles per gallon if you count straight from the batteries. 15 times the American fleet average!

With a 75 kW fast charger(Rich Rudman of Manzanita Micro has developed and tested one on a pack of Exide Orbital batteries, charging it from 20% state of charge to 80% state of charge in 7 minutes), the 15 kWh battery pack might be charged in 15 minutes from 0% to 100%, for an additional 150 miles range. All we need is the infrastructure, and these lead acid batteries used in this theoretical concept are by no means advanced and are the extremely low energy density ones you find in use today. 150 miles per charge is really good range, 1/2-2/3 that of a gas car.

Weight with all the EV components would be about 2,400 pounds assuming a 200 pound driver. I ran a performance simulation on this proposed car and 0-60 mph came out to be a blistering 4.5 seconds, 1/4 mile drag in 13.2 seconds, and with appropriate gear ratios, top speed over 170 mph! A true hypercar.

Now, imagine that the EV components, the controller, charger, regulators, fuses, DC-DC, motors were not hand built by small businesses with one or two employees(Manzanita Micro and Cafe Electric are both one man operations!), but instead mass produced. And figure that Loremo supplies gliders pre-stripped of all IC related components so that they were not part of the cost, shaving off perhaps $4k from the $13,000 car.

The price tag could creep below $15,000. $15,000 for Ferrari performance, and 100% electric drive.

Who WOULDN'T want to buy a car like that? For that matter, the Loremo as a diesel version is still remarkable. But eliminate need for liquid fuels in transportation and allow cars to be fueled by wind and solar, or even coal, natural gas, hydroelectric dams, and nukes if needed, would do a lot to ween us from dependency on a single fuel source.

Too bad we haven't adopted this technology yet. It's been around for ages. The proposed EV above? Take out the 1,200 pounds of lead acid batteries at 12.5 wh/lb specific capacity and replace with 500 pounds of lithium ion batteries at 70 wh/lb specific capacity, and you would have a 1,700 pound electric car that consumed 80 wh/mile @ 60 mph, and had 430 miles range. Mass production of lithium ion batteries for automotive application would peg the price at $250/kWh according to AC Propulsion, or an $8,750 battery pack for over 400 miles range, versus the $2,900 cost of the Exide Orbitals. With a 700 pound reduction in weight, 0-60 mph would drop to 3.5 seconds, and 1/4 mile time to 12 seconds, and cost would only increase about $5k.

That would be fucking nuts. Imagine a hyper efficient musclecar era, that is oil independent. The possibility is certainly there. We just need to implement it pre peak. Imagine a cross between technofix and ecotopia, a sort of have your cake and eat it too without raping the environment scenario...
Last edited by The_Toecutter on Sun 26 Feb 2006, 01:06:41, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby The_Virginian » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 00:02:29

I think it has potential.

Personaly, I would scrap the 20 HP model, in favor of only one model to streamline production...maybe a compromise 40 HP?

One thing the website does not tell me is the body/frame materials. Also where are the DOORS to get the 4 passangers in?

A 2009 production date is a bit far off to get excited IMHO.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby J-Rod » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 00:58:08

Yeah the doors kinda freaked me out a bit too, but usually they do stuff like that with a concept car. Remember the concept for the new VW Bug? It had an all glass roof, no way that met safety standards. I think something like this is at least the right direction, it only makes sense to make something that will do the same job, just *lighter*.

I loved the response too, TC. I am too lazy to go look up posts, but if I am not mistaken you're really into electric cars, and building them, no?
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby Sys1 » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 04:31:18

Looks like a futuristic car. Seems suited to a post peak oil world imho.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby dooberheim » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 06:19:54

Excellent informative post, Toecutter. I'd like to see more superlight cars made available also. I think there is a small but growing market for things like that in the US. One thing we have to get past is the attitude of many family people that they want a heavy large vehicle "because my kids are more important than a few extra dollars in gas". Simply driving in an attentive fashion will save more lives than all the extra steel in the world.

I think one practical limit to the size of batteries in an EV or plug-in hybrid is the charge one can get from a standard 120V 15 amp outlet overnight, which would be about 15 KWh in 10 hours. That's still a lot of battery, but it would limit vehicle size and payload more than the average American might be willing to accept.

I'd like to see something like a Geo Metro 4 door with a 1.2 or so liter common rail turbodiesel. It would have performance comparable to the gas engine version (adequate if not spectacular) and get in the range of 65 mpg highway. This might a bit more low-tech way to achieve improvement in the US avg MPG and save a few million bpd as we slide down the back of the peak...

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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby seldom_seen » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 06:51:51

hope that thing has some great suspension. something tells me the roads of the future are going to have lots of ruts and holes and bumps. Maybe better suited to a horse? heh.

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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby The_Toecutter » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 06:57:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ne thing we have to get past is the attitude of many family people that they want a heavy large vehicle "because my kids are more important than a few extra dollars in gas". Simply driving in an attentive fashion will save more lives than all the extra steel in the world.


What's ironic is that these heavy large SUVs aren't very safe compared to a conventional car. The risk of rollover outweighs their benefits, and they mostly become a danger to others.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think one practical limit to the size of batteries in an EV or plug-in hybrid is the charge one can get from a standard 120V 15 amp outlet overnight, which would be about 15 KWh in 10 hours. That's still a lot of battery, but it would limit vehicle size and payload more than the average American might be willing to accept.


Most Americans drive less than 40 miles per day. A midsize EV like a converted Ford Taurus, with no special attention to aerodynamics, will use about 250-300 wh/mile, or about 12.5-15 kWh for 50 miles driving a day.

That conventional outlet could more than handle that, plugging the car in at home overnight as the driver sleeps.

Now imagine the vehicle aerodynamics are improved, and that ford Taurus size car nly needs 150-200 wh/mile. It would then be possible to do 75-100 miles driving per day average and still have enough time to recharge the car at home when it's not in use. Even in sprawled America, a very small minority drives that far or farther in the course of a day.

If you want to do fast charging, it simply won't be for home use. Fast charging is something that should be implemented for long trips, and it would very rarely be used considering most people might only take a long trip 2-3 times per year. We can do 15 minute fast charging for a 30 kWh battery pack with today's technology, but we need to develop the infrastructure. Keep in mind this is a lot of power we'd be dealing with, on the order of 150 kW when you count in losses! But it has been demonstrated by Mitsubishi among others and it works, the batteries can take it if they have a proper management system. Also consider Rich Rudman of Manzanita Micro, who has nowhere near the development tools or cash that Mitsubishi or Subaru did, has built 75 kW chargers that operate from 480V industrial line feeds, and charged 6-7 kWh lead acid battery packs in 7 minutes...

All we need is infrastructure. The technology hurdle is gone, but the politics of the oil and auto industry and the growth oriented governments persist. Can't have people driving around with only one moving part under the hood and a motor that lasts 500,000+ miles in a car rated for 40 years lifespan, nor can they have them ending their oil addiction as the oil industry would see reduced profits, not can they have them reduce tax revenue, with the G8 nations making more money on oil tax revenues than OPEC makes on oil itself... These entities don't care about you or I, the mere mortals that will suffer the dieoff should it happen.

Likewise, this 157 mpg car also threatens their status quo. 2009 will be a bit late for the small company making them to bring them out, and I await real images instead of that computer generated crap they showed us. The idea seems very plausible though. Too bad we didn't make this car 20 years ago, as we just as well could have...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'d like to see something like a Geo Metro 4 door with a 1.2 or so liter common rail turbodiesel. It would have performance comparable to the gas engine version (adequate if not spectacular) and get in the range of 65 mpg highway. This might a bit more low-tech way to achieve improvement in the US avg MPG and save a few million bpd as we slide down the back of the peak...


Forget that. Why not lower a 215 horsepower VW Jetta turbodiesel into that bitch? 60 mpg, stump pulling torque, AND 0-60 mph in 4 seconds! That would be a fun little car to dust off those 10 mpg Dodge Vipers with. And she'd sound like a farm tractor! :-D

Improve the aerodynamics, and fuel economy could rise into the 75-80 mpg range in a small Metro sized car with that engine. Use lightweigh composites like the Loremo, and 85-90 mpg and further improved acceleration would be had. Such a car would be efficient when you're nice, and downright suicidal if you get the lead foot tendacies.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby RacerJace » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 08:16:46

How about this for the way of the future !!!

http://www.theaircar.com/index.html
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby gg3 » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 08:27:45

J-Rod, TC is the resident automotive engineering genius. If I were wealthy I'd write him a blank check for whatever labs, personnel, and equipment he wanted.

Re. SUVs, the marketing angle was "buy protection for your kids." The marketing angle for EVs and PHEVs and so on, should be something along the lines of "buy your kids a future."

TC, practical question. Have you ever thought of doing a business startup? For example start by building retrofitted gliders, and then reinvest into complete vehicle design including original chassis/bodies. Seek out investors who are in it for the long term. Then see about merging or consolidating with other small-scale firms in the field to create a larger entity. Assume it could be done in such a manner that you would be able to stick with engineering, and the rest of the management team would be engineering-oriented. Does that interest you?
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby legit » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 08:43:24

All these new cars take loads of oil to manufacture
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby dooberheim » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 08:53:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Toecutter', 'W')e can do 15 minute fast charging for a 30 kWh battery pack with today's technology, but we need to develop the infrastructure. Keep in mind this is a lot of power we'd be dealing with, on the order of 150 kW when you count in losses! But it has been demonstrated by Mitsubishi among others and it works, the batteries can take it if they have a proper management system. Also consider Rich Rudman of Manzanita Micro, who has nowhere near the development tools or cash that Mitsubishi or Subaru did, has built 75 kW chargers that operate from 480V industrial line feeds, and charged 6-7 kWh lead acid battery packs in 7 minutes...


TC, how much does fast charging like that reduce the life of lead-acid batteries? I've done a fair amount of research on batteries for my solar power project, and I know that the life of most batteries is compromised when you start charging above the 5 hour rate or so. What kind of management do they do?

DK

BTW, I thought Jetta's PD 1.9 liter turbodiesel only put out 100 hp, not 215. Or are you talking about a chipped and modified engine?
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby Coolman » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 10:48:26

Less than 10% of the population owns a car. May I suggest a bicycle or walking if you really want to save the future for your children. You sure will be in the in crowd. Why people hang on to the stressfulness of driving is beyond me.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby Coolman » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 10:51:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('legit', 'A')ll these new cars take loads of oil to manufacture


I have not reaseached it, but I am sure that it is true. There is no such thing as a free lunch, like most Americans believe.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby frankthetank » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 10:54:48

I'm just wondering if Helicopter Bernake plans on dropping the $11,000 in my mailbox or right on the front lawn??
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby J-Rod » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 11:23:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Coolman', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('legit', 'A')ll these new cars take loads of oil to manufacture


I have not reaseached it, but I am sure that it is true. There is no such thing as a free lunch, like most Americans believe.


Yes, cars take oil to make. And we exist in an infrastructure that centers around driving. We have a limited number of paths to go on. Many are proponents of bringing on die off as fast as possible, to "save the Earth" as fast as possible. (I would refer you to the George Carlin sketch where he talks about hippies and saving the Earth. The Earth will be around for quite a long time, the *people* on it however, might be a different story...)
Other people try to think of ways to change our current infrastructure to account for less of a resource, to enable current life to have a semblance of what it exists as today. Stuff like transition to cellulosic ethanol production, and ultra light efficient cars might just make that possible, however most of us are in agreement that it's likely much too late, barring any significant oil discoveries, or if Chindia disappears tomorrow.

Which path is "correct"? That's all a matter of opinion, and how far on the doomer scale you reside. This isn't really about a free lunch, one would have to do a ton of math based on provided numbers that can be argued over, to find out if offsets in oil consumption outweigh the construction oil costs.

I wouldn't mind really if tomorrow, I could wake up and the world would be like it was in about 1650, and I was an American Indian. The thing is, that's not possible. The thing that worries me is the transition from an era of lots of energy to an era of little. So when I see things that point to even the *possibility* of a smoother transition, I let it give me hope. I refuse to simply become an ultra-doomer and wait for the PO cult version of armegeddon. That doesn't mean of course I am cornucopian, quite the opposite. We are likely screwed, I am in the process of getting my plans together to weather a major recession/depression, and providing for my own heat and food. But that's another post... :)
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby IanC » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 14:03:43

I'm with Coolman and the others who think that WE CAN'T BUY OUR WAY OUT OF PEAK OIL. I'm getting annoyed with everyone looking to a new product to protect them from the inevitable powerdown that will have to happen. It's just like going out and madly buying duct tape and plastic sheeting during the anthrax scare a few years ago, "I'll be safe if I buy the right thing - someone ELSE will have to deal with Peak Oil, but not me!".

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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 14:13:54

Unfortunately Ian I think the masses are going to attempt to hold on to what we have with the death grip of an addict. They are not going to let go easily and will go down kicking screaming and fighting. I would embrace a power down and would welcome intelligent change to get there. I just don't think we have a snowball's chance in hell of that hapening. Nothing measurable will be done until there is a crisis and obviuosly that will be too late. I do harbor some hope for my kids that these things could buy us some time, we will see.

There are pitifully few who are awake to this problem and it would take a huge movement to make a change in this regard. I don't see that happening quickly enough either.
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Re: Loremo - 157mpg

Unread postby PolestaR » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 17:15:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('The_Toecutter', 'S')ay not 150 mpg, but instead 60 mpg started to become in demand 10 years ago in 1996. It takes the auto fleet 15 years to turn over, or about 7% of on road cars per year. 40% of oil is consumed in automobile fuel today, or about 32 bpd. Switching the entire fleet to a mere 60 mpg fuel economy average from 22.5 mpg, would bring this down to 12 bpd.

Today, assuming 60 mpg cars are now 67% of our fleet due to the 15 year fleet turnover rate beginning in 1996, we'd be consuming 18.7 bpd for auto fuel, instead of 32 bpd.

So that would drop total oil consumption to 66.7 bbd. A drop of 17% over today! This is such a significant drop in consumption as to significantly delay peak, more than enough time for a full adoption of renewables to be set in place. With a 3% decline rate post peak, it will take 6 years for oil production to drop 17% from what it was if peak were today. Further, we'd have saved over 3 years worth of oil, so that's at least 9 more years to implement a solution, half of what the Hirsch report specified was needed to mitigate the effects of peak oil.

That would have been a very good start, halfway to a solution.

150 mpg? We'd have definately made plenty of time to scale renewables up. n the order of 15 years.



The problem is, we didn't do that. The oil industry wanted immediate short term profits, so did the auto industry, so did the utility industry. It was status quo, gas guzzling SUVs, oil wars, dirty coal electricity, and not efficient cars and EVs, addressing poverty, or clean wind and solar electricity... TPTB chose unfettered growth over sustainability and smaller government, and the people will pay the price.



It's funny how you think that "years" ago such cars could be out on the market. Some technology these cars use has only been developed recently. Have you factored the (possibly) different materials used in such cars and if they can scale?

Motorbikes are a lot more fuel efficient than cars and in a lot of cases can suffice for most tasks, yet I don't see millions of them on the road. It's all about what people want and can afford. How many people out there now have cheap cars (less than $10000) which are on the road? Probably around half if not more. Can these people afford $13000 for a new fuel efficient car? No. The only reason there is a "complete" turnover rate of cars is because the new ones become cheaper because there is many years of alternatives available to buyers. When these new cars hit, it's the same as if there was no cars before them, meaning their price will stay high until another 10-15 years minimum.
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