โNov-30-2019 03:48 AM
โDec-09-2019 10:20 AM
โDec-09-2019 10:08 AM
wilber1 wrote:4x4ord wrote:
I cant think of an application where two different displacement turbo diesels are offered in the same vehicle but the Honda Accord Sport is available with two different turbo gasoline engines of different displacement and I know the smaller engine is rated to get somewhere around 10 - 15% better fuel economy. It seems to me the Honda engines are both designed to make similar power per liter. In the example I'm talking about .... a 6.7 making 475 horse vs a 5.0 making 300 I would expect a greater spread in the low load fuel economy than in the Hondas case because the 5.0 liter can be designed with a higher compression ratio than the 6.7.
Nissan's variable compression ratio engine does both. Low compression/high boost for power, high compression/low boost for economy.
โDec-09-2019 09:57 AM
FishOnOne wrote:rjstractor wrote:FishOnOne wrote:FlatBroke wrote:
Too much power
I'm sure the turbos are still good. :E
The driver's shorts, not so much....
LMAO... I didn't think about that one. :B
โDec-09-2019 09:55 AM
โDec-08-2019 06:25 PM
rjstractor wrote:FishOnOne wrote:FlatBroke wrote:
Too much power
I'm sure the turbos are still good. :E
The driver's shorts, not so much....
โDec-08-2019 05:48 PM
FishOnOne wrote:FlatBroke wrote:
Too much power
I'm sure the turbos are still good. :E
โDec-08-2019 04:23 PM
FlatBroke wrote:
Too much power
โDec-07-2019 08:50 PM
4x4ord wrote:
I cant think of an application where two different displacement turbo diesels are offered in the same vehicle but the Honda Accord Sport is available with two different turbo gasoline engines of different displacement and I know the smaller engine is rated to get somewhere around 10 - 15% better fuel economy. It seems to me the Honda engines are both designed to make similar power per liter. In the example I'm talking about .... a 6.7 making 475 horse vs a 5.0 making 300 I would expect a greater spread in the low load fuel economy than in the Hondas case because the 5.0 liter can be designed with a higher compression ratio than the 6.7.
โDec-07-2019 07:54 AM
โDec-05-2019 09:46 PM
4x4ord wrote:
I cant think of an application where two different displacement turbo diesels are offered in the same vehicle but the Honda Accord Sport is available with two different turbo gasoline engines of different displacement and I know the smaller engine is rated to get somewhere around 10 - 15% better fuel economy. It seems to me the Honda engines are both designed to make similar power per liter. In the example I'm talking about .... a 6.7 making 475 horse vs a 5.0 making 300 I would expect a greater spread in the low load fuel economy than in the Hondas case because the 5.0 liter can be designed with a higher compression ratio than the 6.7.
โDec-04-2019 09:55 PM
โDec-04-2019 09:03 PM
4x4ord wrote:
^^^^ You may be right that the difference in mpg cruising down the highway might not be "that much". It would probably be 10% and overall mileage would be affected by about 15%. So in my case if I owned a smaller engine truck for 10 years I could expect to save $5500 .... I don't think it would pay for the electric axles I would want on my RV if I had the smaller engine.
โDec-04-2019 07:16 AM
rhagfo wrote: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.
Yes, several of the dams on the lower Columbia have fish ladders, but there isn't one on the Grand Coulee dam that I know of.
โDec-04-2019 07:15 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.