by MonteQuest » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 00:45:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lper100km', ' ')I thought you had rested. However, you have returned to the original theme with apparent understanding.
No one is looking for an explanation that justifies this. In this context, it's irrelevant. The issue is simply how far does/did a gallon of fuel move an 'average' automobile plus passengers. It's astoundingly disappointing that there has been no improvement in 100 years. That's not physics or engineering. That's human arrogance.
No improvement?
Like I said, I feel sorry for you folks.
Let me try once more.
Cars today, on
average, get less miles per gallon than the Model T because cars today, on
average, are heavier, have more HP robbing gizmos, and are driven faster. Not to mention,
few have 4 cylinder motors, and
none have 20 hp motors.
A gallon of gas moves an
average car today much farther than a gallon of gas moved an
average car 100 years ago.
But it gets less mpg, you say?
So? It moves more mass/gallon.
It is more efficient as it does
more work with the same amount of energy.
Your beef seems to be that because engineers haven't overcome the laws of physics that they are sandbagging and arrogant.
On the other hand, there is a
minority of cars today with relatively the same mass, that get great gas mileage over the Model T due to engineering efficiency breakthroughs. The
average buyer does not buy them, however....and
if they do, they don't drove them 45 miles per hour. And this is significant.
Once the speed gets up into the 50-55 mph range each 1 mph increase in speed represents a significant increase in power required. Eventually, the power required increases more than the efficiency of the engine improves. At this point the mileage starts dropping.
The National Academy of Science says that to improve gas mileage in cars today, they would have to become smaller and down weighted, as the saying goes. That means that they become less safe. The NAS report states that for every 100 pounds you lighten a vehicle, there are 304 more deaths on the highway. According to the report, to implement these improvements would take at least 10 to 15 years.
Whether to increase fuel efficiency standards has become part of the energy debate now before the House of Representatives. This NAS report is in front of them.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."