The truth about hybrid cars
As I’ve read about gas/electric hybrid cars over the last couple of years, it’s stuck me that some of the energy- and emission-saving features that they tout aren’t specific to hybrids, specifically an engine that turns off when you stop and/or put the manual transmission in neutral.
In Switzerland, for example, the law says you must turn off your car’s motor at a stop light or when waiting for a train to cross. I’ve heard that is why European stoplights go red-YELLOW-green: to give motorists notice of impending green light so that they can start their engines.
This article, The Truth About Hybrids, addresses this issue:
[M]anufacturers try to…add to the hybrid’s headline-grabbing mileage figures by the extensive use of non-hybrid gas-saving technology. Engine shut-off at idle, electric power steering, harder and reduced rolling resistance tires (at the expense of comfort and traction), reduced option content, reduced engine performance, and, in the case of the Ford, a continuously variable transmission (CVT) all help raise the cars’ overall efficiency.
Of course, if gas mileage is the ultimate goal, all of these strategies could be applied to a ‘standard’ car. A non-hybrid model with the equivalent modifications would significantly narrow the mileage gap with its hybrid sibling. In fact, in normal use, the margin between truly comparable hybrid and non-hybrid cars could be less than 10%– hardly enough to justify the extra purchase price.
My conventional Corolla gets 30+ mpg in city driving and almost 40 mpg on road trips. Therefore, I’ve not been that impressed with the supposed mileage of hybrids. For all their technological advances, they only get a few more miles per gallon (and according to the article, actual mileage of hybrids is not as good as the EPA numbers). Add a few of those features to my car, and I’d be right up there, too.
Related rant: One of my pet peeves is people who leave their cars idling when they’re stopped somewhere: talking on their phone in a parking lot, running in to a store for a minute, etc. I can understand leaving the car running if you’re sitting in it in hot Texas weather. Otherwise, it’s just a big waste of fuel. This morning, I was sorely tempted to try to educate a fellow patron of my local bagel shop when she came out to get in her car that she’d left idling while getting her breakfast.
Hi Rafe,
Yeah, I started to put something in this post about that ‘received wisdom’. That’s my assumption, too. If that ‘received wisdom’ ever was true, I cannot imagine it is still true today with the level of technology in our engines. I’ll have to see if I can dig up any actual facts on that.
I don’t usually leave my car idling, but I think that many people fear turning it off too much because of the received wisdom that starting your car is by far the worst thing that can happen to its engine. I have no idea if it’s still true (or ever was).
Bryan,
That may have been the original motivation to create these cars, and that may have been your primary reason for buying them, but the auto makers certainly pitch the fuel efficiency, and–for good or bad–most people (outside CA anyway) see them primarily as high fuel efficiency cars, I think.
Regards, Stan
As an owner of a hybrid, I can tell you that the primary mission of said vehicle is to reduce emissions. Increased MPGs are a happy side-effect (but those can be negated if the operator doesn’t know how to properly drive the vehicle).