Mar-06-2017 11:55 AM
Mar-10-2017 07:45 AM
troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Mar-10-2017 07:12 AM
Mar-10-2017 06:56 AM
Wild Card wrote:Me Again wrote:troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Yeah, but the oil companies bought that carburetor from that guy that designed and built it in his garage in the early 60's or was in the 70's. No wait maybe it was in the late 50's. At any rate it was buy him out or put a hit on him. 😉 😉 😉
VW did, and had to buy them all back
Mar-10-2017 06:26 AM
Mar-10-2017 06:15 AM
Me Again wrote:troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Yeah, but the oil companies bought that carburetor from that guy that designed and built it in his garage in the early 60's or was in the 70's. No wait maybe it was in the late 50's. At any rate it was buy him out or put a hit on him. 😉 😉 😉
Mar-10-2017 06:01 AM
FishOnOne wrote:troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
That really depends on several attributes (i.e. Cost, size, complexity)
Mar-10-2017 05:48 AM
FishOnOne wrote:Which is exactly why the CAFE standards were too over zealous and needed to change; cost, size and complexity.troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
That really depends on several attributes (i.e. Cost, size, complexity)
Mar-10-2017 04:52 AM
Mar-10-2017 04:27 AM
troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Mar-10-2017 04:24 AM
troubledwaters wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Mar-10-2017 04:17 AM
FishOnOne wrote:Any manufacturer that can develop a car that can get 54 mpg is going to sell ton of them.
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Mar-09-2017 04:46 PM
Mar-09-2017 04:39 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
The only problem I can think of by moving the goal post closer is the companies who've invested substantial money to be in line the new standard are ultimately penalized where as the companies who did very little will benefit the most.
Mar-09-2017 04:09 PM
Mar-09-2017 03:42 PM
thomasmnile wrote:
FWIW, the proposal on CAFE is only to roll back the compliance requirement for 54 mpg average by 2025. Not a wholesale repeal of the the standards.