โNov-30-2019 03:48 AM
โDec-04-2019 07:11 AM
wilber1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
"I live in a place that has the highest gas prices in North America but relatively cheap electricity. I am seriously considering a PHEV as my next vehicle."
YEA but think about all the Salmon you will be killing.
Why? the two main salmon rivers are the Skeena and Fraser. They don't now, nor will they ever have dams on them.
โDec-04-2019 04:35 AM
โDec-04-2019 04:03 AM
winniman wrote:rjstractor wrote:I have been to the Bonneville Dam in the Columbia Gorge. They have fish ladders for the fish to get around the dam.wilber1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
"I live in a place that has the highest gas prices in North America but relatively cheap electricity. I am seriously considering a PHEV as my next vehicle."
YEA but think about all the Salmon you will be killing.
Why? the two main salmon rivers are the Skeena and Fraser. They don't now, nor will they ever have dams on them.
BC gets about 90% of its power from hydroelectric-from the Columbia and Peace rivers. The BC power from the Columbia doesn't harm any salmon- because the dams downstream in the states take care of that... all joking aside, it's too bad we can't (or won't) develop hydroelectric technology that allows for fish passage. Hydro power is literally solar energy.
โDec-04-2019 12:40 AM
โDec-03-2019 08:14 PM
4x4ord wrote:
I think the point is that a 5.0 liter turbo diesel designed to make 300 hp will use considerably less fuel moving a pickup truck down the highway at 60 mph, where the power output is only about 60 hp, than will a 6.7 liter turbo diesel designed with a low compression ratio to allow for high boost levels and a 475 hp out put doing the same job.
โDec-03-2019 06:28 PM
rjstractor wrote:I have been to the Bonneville Dam in the Columbia Gorge. They have fish ladders for the fish to get around the dam.wilber1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
"I live in a place that has the highest gas prices in North America but relatively cheap electricity. I am seriously considering a PHEV as my next vehicle."
YEA but think about all the Salmon you will be killing.
Why? the two main salmon rivers are the Skeena and Fraser. They don't now, nor will they ever have dams on them.
BC gets about 90% of its power from hydroelectric-from the Columbia and Peace rivers. The BC power from the Columbia doesn't harm any salmon- because the dams downstream in the states take care of that... all joking aside, it's too bad we can't (or won't) develop hydroelectric technology that allows for fish passage. Hydro power is literally solar energy.
โDec-03-2019 06:10 PM
wilber1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
"I live in a place that has the highest gas prices in North America but relatively cheap electricity. I am seriously considering a PHEV as my next vehicle."
YEA but think about all the Salmon you will be killing.
Why? the two main salmon rivers are the Skeena and Fraser. They don't now, nor will they ever have dams on them.
โDec-03-2019 10:28 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
"I live in a place that has the highest gas prices in North America but relatively cheap electricity. I am seriously considering a PHEV as my next vehicle."
YEA but think about all the Salmon you will be killing.
โDec-03-2019 06:33 AM
โDec-03-2019 04:39 AM
FishOnOne wrote:ShinerBock wrote:
While I like 500 crank hp in stock form on a diesel truck, I don't like what they will have to do to get it there to keep emissions in check. That means pushing fuel systems to their limits and adding more unreliable emissions equipment. I am more of a fan of adding reliable power after it rolls off the assembly line.
It would be nice if they added the ability to change power levels on the fly like a tuner does. When you are not towing, it is safe to run higher powered tunes and switch to lower power tunes depending on load and temps. Although, most trucks(both gas and diesel) already do this without a switch and most people don't know it.
And you have engines with the CP4.2 pump producing 400hp and less.
โDec-03-2019 04:07 AM
Edd505 wrote:Groover wrote:
A German company has shown an intriguing prototype.
Self propelled camper
One big advantage of a driven trailer would be the extra traction available.
A big disadvantage is that the drive train wouldn't get used nearly as much as it would in tow vehicle so payback would be much longer. However, if the system makes such that you can pull the trailer with a much smaller vehicle there could be some real advantages in that.
Isn't self propelled campers Class A/B/C's?
โDec-03-2019 03:46 AM
โDec-02-2019 10:00 PM
wilber1 wrote:
A small engine at a higher power setting is more thermally efficient than a larger engine at a lower power setting. That's why the Rutan Voyager shut down its larger engine when it got to altitude and just used its smaller engine in cruise during its round the world flight.
โDec-02-2019 06:25 PM
Groover wrote:
A German company has shown an intriguing prototype.
Self propelled camper
One big advantage of a driven trailer would be the extra traction available.
A big disadvantage is that the drive train wouldn't get used nearly as much as it would in tow vehicle so payback would be much longer. However, if the system makes such that you can pull the trailer with a much smaller vehicle there could be some real advantages in that.
โDec-02-2019 06:00 PM
bikendan wrote:mkirsch wrote:Bedlam wrote:
A plug in hybrid would work well as a tow vehicle, but the weight, cost and complexity makes it hard to recover any savings
Nobody ever promised any "savings" at least not any monetary ones.
You're supposed to spend as much as you can, "sacrifice" in the name of the planet, so you can show off how good of a person you are to everyone else. "See? I drive a HYBRID! It cost me a LOT of money, but I'm SAVING the planet, so it's worth it! Pat me on the back! Please?"
That's why the Prius nickname is the "Pious", because that's how their owners act.:W