Now that we've moved to a place with TV, we have to sit through commercials. There is one thing that really gets under my skin though. These commercials for crappy little econo boxes are advertising 40 miles to the gallon fuel economy like it is something to be proud of.
To give a bit of a backstory, one of my cars years ago was a 1964 Triumph Spitfire. It had a passenger door that liked to randomly open in the middle of left turns, a 1,147 cc engine, 2 Stromberg carburetors, a 4-speed transmission, and no overdrive. It was a busy little engine when I had the balls to take it on the freeway. Being eye level with lugnuts on semi truck was a bit unnerving. Lets just say it was a death trap. The thing is, it got 40 miles to the gallon on the freeway. I would get between 32 and 36 in town as well. It was quick enough, but that's just because it barely weighed 1,500lbs. Lets fast forward a few decades in automotive technology. My wife used to own a 1995 Honda Civic. It was the higher end model with electric everything and AC and VTEC. Even at over 233,000 miles on the original engine (and clutch), it still got 42mpg on the freeway. Now fast forward to today. They are still advertising 40mpg economy as something to be proud of. I watch Top Gear (the good one, the British one) and back in 2008 when they did the economy run, all three cars they drove got immensely better mileage than what we get in the US. Hell, the VW got 80mpg; TWICE what our "economy" cars here get. I know many of these cars aren't allowed to be sold in the US because of emissions regulations, but it really begs the question, how can a vehicle that goes twice the distance per gallon be putting out more emissions than one that goes half the distance? Something just doesn't add up. You hear politicians on both sides shouting "We need more economical cars" yet we really haven't made any advances towards more fuel efficient vehicles.
Disclaimer: I know US Gallon is a bit smaller than Imperial Gallon, but it still doesn't make up for that big of a difference.
To give a bit of a backstory, one of my cars years ago was a 1964 Triumph Spitfire. It had a passenger door that liked to randomly open in the middle of left turns, a 1,147 cc engine, 2 Stromberg carburetors, a 4-speed transmission, and no overdrive. It was a busy little engine when I had the balls to take it on the freeway. Being eye level with lugnuts on semi truck was a bit unnerving. Lets just say it was a death trap. The thing is, it got 40 miles to the gallon on the freeway. I would get between 32 and 36 in town as well. It was quick enough, but that's just because it barely weighed 1,500lbs. Lets fast forward a few decades in automotive technology. My wife used to own a 1995 Honda Civic. It was the higher end model with electric everything and AC and VTEC. Even at over 233,000 miles on the original engine (and clutch), it still got 42mpg on the freeway. Now fast forward to today. They are still advertising 40mpg economy as something to be proud of. I watch Top Gear (the good one, the British one) and back in 2008 when they did the economy run, all three cars they drove got immensely better mileage than what we get in the US. Hell, the VW got 80mpg; TWICE what our "economy" cars here get. I know many of these cars aren't allowed to be sold in the US because of emissions regulations, but it really begs the question, how can a vehicle that goes twice the distance per gallon be putting out more emissions than one that goes half the distance? Something just doesn't add up. You hear politicians on both sides shouting "We need more economical cars" yet we really haven't made any advances towards more fuel efficient vehicles.
Disclaimer: I know US Gallon is a bit smaller than Imperial Gallon, but it still doesn't make up for that big of a difference.