By Eric Peters on 10.6.05 @ 12:07AM
We could be driving powerful, stylish vehicles that get 35-45 mpg -- if we lived in Europe.
We could be driving powerful, stylish vehicles that get 35-45
mpg -- if we lived in Europe.
In the land of $4-$6 per gallon gas, about half the passenger
cars in service are diesel-powered -- and not just ancient Mercedes
300Ds chuffing along in the left lane at 45 mph, either. There are
sleek and swift high-performance diesel luxury sedans like the BMW
530d -- with 231 horsepower and 369-lbs.-ft. of torque -- capable
of 155 mph on the top and 0-60 in 6.8 seconds. Or how about the
Land Rover LR3? Its 2.7 liter turbo-diesel V-6 delivers 190
horsepower -- and 35 mpg on the highway. That's Honda Civic mileage
-- from a two-ton, mid-sized 4x4 SUV.
Just a sampling for you.
In Europe, buyers can choose from dozens of vehicles, in all
classes, sizes and price ranges -- with efficient diesel power the
only common denominator.
We, in contrast, have virtually no choice when it comes to
diesel-powered passenger vehicles.
Mercedes and VW -- and that's it.
Instead, we're offered gas-electric hybrids -- which is fine,
but far from inexpensive (and thus far from economical). Hybrids
cost around $2,000-$10,000 more to buy than conventional, gas-only
versions of the same car with similar trim and equipment. Even at
$3 per gallon, you'll have to burn an awful lot of fuel before
reaching break even. Indeed, a number of recent stories have "done
the math" -- and found that, for the average buyer, a hybrid can be
more expensive to operate than a "gas guzzling" conventional
car.
And there's always the risk -- downplayed by the automakers but
real, nonetheless -- that down-the-road upkeep/maintenance costs of
complex hybrid technology (especially the battery pack) could be
very, very expensive indeed.
Meanwhile, the diesel engine is rock solid, proven technology --
100 years old and refined to the "nth" degree. Modern passenger car
diesels, in addition to being as indestructible as the Terminator,
are also smooth, quiet and very powerful. They now match (or
surpass) equivalent gas engines in every category of performance --
and blow them away when it comes to economy. Six seconds to 60 --
and 40 mpg.
Good luck finding that in a gas-powered anything.
SO HOW COME WE'RE deprived of these great engines? Is it a
conspiracy? The evil machinations of the Illuminati?
Nope.
The reason is as close as your local filling station. The diesel
that's available in this country is fine for big rigs -- but
terrible for modern high-efficiency passenger car diesels. The
stuff we have is laden with sulfur -- and putting high-sulfur
diesel into a modern high-performance/high-efficiency
turbo-direct-injection diesel passenger car engine is like pouring
Karo syrup into the tank of your Pinto. The results, in both cases,
are not pretty.
European-spec. diesels are precision machines that need
high-grade low sulfur content fuel. Fed properly, they deliver all
the good things -- high specific output and great mileage -- with
none of the bad stuff -- clouds of smoke, high-emissions output and
warranty/repair problems.
But thanks to short-sightedness on our part, we did nothing over
the past 10-20 years to get high-quality (low sulfur) diesel into
the pipeline; the sooty, high-sulfur swill we had was A-OK for the
big rigs -- and that, apparently, was good enough for us.
Hey, when gasoline's only $1.40 per gallon, why bother with
diesel... ?
This is why we don't get the BMW 530d, LR3 diesel -- or any of
the other state-of-the-art diesel-powered vehicles currently
available in Europe. The manufacturers are not about to sell
vehicles that won't run properly on the available fuel. Indeed,
there are so many potential problems in terms of emissions issues
alone that they'd be crazy to even try. Next to the IRS, the EPA is
the last government agency you want drawing a target on your
back.
So, until we can get decent quality diesel fuel -- sometime in
2007, supposedly -- we'll just have to wait.
And pay.
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