[Vwdiesel] Was-It's peak oil, duh.-now- milage comparison
Dave Cook
davevw at yahoo.com
Sun Mar 16 22:46:32 PDT 2008
My '92 Cabriolet 5-speed (which is very similar to a Rabbit setup though it is running Digifant engine management) got me nearly 30 MPGs top up at highway speeds during the summer. In town, if I really drive nice, I've gotten it close to that. In the winter, it does seem to have dropped a bit. (Gas is also different in the winter.)
I'd say the overall average must be near 26 or so since I bought the car in June. (And sold my only diesel, sniff.)
Not exactly what you are looking for, but close I think.
David
Tony and Lillie <tonyandlillie1 at earthlink.net> wrote: So, this brings up a good point, as well as a question for me. Does anyone
have real-world milage figures or experiences for an A1 gasser with a
5-speed? I'm curious if I actually get 1/3 better milage than a gas VW from
that era. I was thinking of also making a comparison of maintenance, as the
diesels seem to require less. However, when they do require it, it's more
expensive.
And, that's only for the older ones. From what I see at the shop, the TDI's
are higher maintenance and seem to have higher instances of problems than
their gas counterparts. But, I haven't actually logged all the data that it
would take to ensure this is accurate.
Tony Hoffman
----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg Johnson"
To:
Sent: Sunday, March 16, 2008 10:42 PM
Subject: [Vwdiesel] It's peak oil, duh.
> I've been lurking here for awhile. I currently drive a MB diesel but am
> very interested in the upcoming Jetta Sportwagen TDI.
>
> On the one hand, the oil situation is more complex than we believe. Yes,
> it
> easier to process than gas; getting rid of the sulfur probably raised the
> bar a bit. Supply and demand is worse than we think because unlike gas
> drivers, who only compete against other cars, we also compete against
> ships,
> tug boats, locomotives, trucks, construction equipment and so forth.
>
> On a more simplistic level, the EPA claims that if, as it is in Europe,
> 1/3
> of the light vehicles in the U.S. were diesels, we would save 1.4 million
> barrels of oil *per day.* With oil trading at $100 per barrel, Big Oil
> is
> not going to let that happen, so they simply raised the price of diesel
> above that of gas and by an amount that's similar to the diesel vs. gas
> mpg
> advantage and that simply and easily takes away the financial reason for
> folks to buy the diesels that will soon be coming to the U.S. In other
> words, if a diesel gets 30% better fuel mileage than a similar gas car,
> you
> just raise the price of diesel by 30% and there is no advantage.
>
> Greg J
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> Vwdiesel at vwfans.com
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Dave Cook
AKA
redcorradoguy
vwwestyman
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