I wish they were available in the U.S.
ZENN Car
Uncle Al
The company is closed. Anyway, they couldn't go fast (not highway-suitable).Uncle Al wrote:This is great![]()
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I wish they were available in the U.S.
It depends very much on the intended usage. An all-electric would be a bad fit for me due to the short ranges involved (I commute 60 miles/day, and in winter that also requires heat, fans, and de-icers which all eat electricity like it's going out of style), a hybrid would be only a marginal fit as I spend about half my time on large motorways and about half in stop-and-go urban traffic which is where the hybrid excels; however, Sapphire spends most of her time within about 40 miles from home and seldom ventures much father than that, so a hybrid -- or even an outright electric -- might work quite well, save for the initial capital outlay. So, one needs to choose wisely based on one's driving patterns.Kirbstone wrote:Frankly the current (excuse the pun) state of Electric car expensive technology leaves me totally cold. I wouldn't touch one with a barge pole.
Part of this may be that Toyota do not have deep experience with turbo-diesel technology; that tends to be a European strong point. Too, Toyota sells strongly into the US and in the US typical diesel technology hasn't changed all that much in 50 years -- it's still loud, stinks to high heaven (mainly sulphur, which the Europeans seem to have learned to refine out but the technology hasn't reached these shores yet), and doesn't perform as well as petrol-powered engines (a technology/design mismatch). So, diesel is almost a non-starter here save for heavy trucks.Comically Toyota with their hybrid cars choose to mate all this with PETROL engines, not turbodiesels, which would be much better. A close friend has a Prius and also a diesel Avensis. The Avensis is what they take on a long journey, as it is MUCH more economical than the petrol/electric Prius.
The price of gasoline is high in Europe because it is taxed, and it is taxed to keep its price high because there is hardly no oil field in Europe. Remember the 50's, before one could drill in the sea and when the US were the largest oil producer in the world.Kirbstone wrote:Because of the price of petrol in Europe...