It has all to do with cost of bringing the diesel cars to market here. Its BS Americans don't want diesel cars, VW sells every single one they bring here. Audi, BMW, merc all sell decent enough amounts of them. The problem is that diesel engines inherently cost more to make, coupled with stricter emissions here and that diesel is usually more expensive than gas means the savings simply don't appear as it does in other markets.
Yes but how much crude to make diesel vs gasoline?
If americans used more diesel surely the price would go up and defeat the point...
One thing regarding post #2: In some states with high taxes (like I have in Illinois), Diesel doesn't fluctuate nearly as much as standard gasoline. Now, sorry if my numbers are a little off, as I've been in Germany the past month, but before I left Chicago gas prices were around 4.30, 4.45, 4.60 for 87/89/91 or 93. Diesel was around 3.90 or so, and its been like that for quite a long time. Gas used to be cheaper, then it got much more expensive recently. It may have gone down again in the past month, but all I'm saying is that in some markets diesel can be cheaper not more expensive. (And I will say, diesel has been cheaper for quite a while now around the Chicago area in general). This is all based on memory of course, and I don't own a diesel car so I don't follow it as closely, just something I noticed.
I'll be watching the incoming 2013 Chevy Cruze diesel very closely. If it can put up around 50mpg on the highway, I would get that over a Prius C when I go car shopping next year.
86 imperial, 71 US equivalent. And not the EPA standard. Probably still getting a good 50-55mpg+ EPA rating though.
Looks like the Smart Car, in other words, a death trap.
No thank you.
It doesn't work that way.
Gasoline and diesel are totally different distillates of crude oil.
If you aren't familliar with distillation, you heat a liquid and at varying temperatures, differend compounds boil off. You cool and collect the vapors. It's an effective way of separating mixtures if you don't need great purity.
vaguely, but i thought there were ways to get more gas or diesel out of a barrel of crude, and either way if you mess with demand its going to mess with the price.
vaguely, but i thought there were ways to get more gas or diesel out of a barrel of crude, and either way if you mess with demand its going to mess with the price.
There's also the currently high price of diesel here to consider. It's about 50 cents more a gallon where I live. About 3.49 vs 3.97.
With the price of diesel, and the extra cost of the diesel engine, it probably still doesn't make economic sense to buy a diesel powered car yet.
Imperial gallons on a different testing cycle.
It should almost be a UN resolution that all websites available in the US touting a European car's mileage state that.
I am sure that in practice this wouldn't even match a gasoline Prius in city, the Prius being larger and faster as well.Primary use of the internet is porn. Secondary use is indeed creating threads like this.
50 cents is 14% higher cost. Diesel just has to be 14% more efficient for it to be worth it. 59 MPG *.86= 50.7 MPG. That's still quite a bit more efficient than the 40mpg petrol version.
From what I recall the diesel cycle doesn't lend itself well to hybrid operation. I think it has to do with the continuous stopping and starting.Because the market here is for gasoline, I too want a diesel(preferably diesel hybrid).
This youtube video seems relevant to this thread.
A good friend of mine bought an Audi Q7 TDI and now only wants to buy Diesels. He just bought a Audi A3 TDI. If I needed a car, I would seriously consider the VW Golf TDI.
I think if Americans were properly educated about Diesels and had a chance to drive one, the public opinion would change quite a bit.
Why would you expect the cost be similar to a prius? The Jetta TDI costs $4k less than a prius, without the lethargy.
I agree. I had a chance to drive the 335d. That thing is amazing. 265hp, 425ft-lbs of torque and it gets 36mpg on the highway!
The thing has so much torque, you'll find yourself hardly needing to rev it past 2k.
In fact the Jetta TDI costs the same amount as a Prius, unless you get the manual tranny, which drops price about a thousand below Prius. Second, it's only very slightly faster.Why would you expect the cost be similar to a prius? The Jetta TDI costs $4k less than a prius, without the lethargy.