How Hybrid Cars Work Video
June 18th, 2008 by Hybrid Car EnthusiastPosted in Hybrid Cars, Hybrid Information | No Comments »
Posted in Hybrid Cars, Hybrid Information | No Comments »
Honda Introduces India’s first hybrid car
Honda Siel Cars launches India’s first hybrid car. The car, according to the company, is 47 per cent more fuel efficient than the Honda Civic petrol car. The retail price of the car in Delhi is Rs 21.5 lakh.
Honda Siel cars plans to sell about a few hundred for 2008. The car is a
combination of a petrol engine and an electic motor. At high speeds, the
petrol engine work while at idling or at traffic signal, the electric motor works. The Honda Civic hybrid car features a three stage iVTEC IMA.
Posted in Honda Hybrid Cars, Hybrid Cars, Hybrid Information | No Comments »
Economic Impact and Foreign hybrid car Use
Hybrid cars make sense: they use less petrol and produce less emissions, saving precious fossil fuels and reducing their impact on the environment.
But if Australians plan to buy them to save money, they could be disappointed.
The models currently on sale on the local market, and those set to be sold here in the next few years, all sell at a premium price.
And, even with petrol prices skyrocketing, when compared with small, conventionally powered vehicles, they still lag behind in total running costs.
The cheapest hybrid available in Australia sells for more than $35,000.
Compare that with a smaller, four-cylinder car, which retails for well under $20,000, the savings in petrol costs need to be significant for the sums to add up.
At present they’re not, with a hybrid likely to return a fuel economy figure of between four and five litres per 100 kilometres compared with about six or seven litres for its smaller rival.
At current petrol prices that would mean a saving in petrol costs of about $6,500 over the 200,000km life of an average car.
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