Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: Engineer
I have not heard this but I agree with you. Double your mileage from a good car to a great car vs the extra 2 from shitty SUV to almost shitty SUV....you get Jack Squat. I guess I can also complain that only first time home buyers get the credit and I don't...shit, I'm pissed! :|
Or, you could look at the facts I already posted - instead of the worst case you mention, that IIRC the average mileage increase was 69%.
No, you misunderstood what I'm talking about. I know full well that there are some substantial gains in the MPG for some of the cars being traded. My point was is that I can't take a good car (24mpg for example) and go to a great car (40mpg Fusion for example) and get a credit. Of course, the whole idea is to get rid of the clunkers from the highway and a 24mpg car would not be a clunker. That's all.
Gotcha. I haven't heard the 'other side' of the argument why they don't allow that, but you make a good point IMO deserving consideration.
One thing I will say is that I've heard the 'clunkers' - not the better cars - put out *huge* amounts of pollution disproprtionate to any gas mileage issue, as in off the top of my head one clunker can pollute more than 100 times as much as other cars, so 1% of cars are causing a huge percent of all the pollution, so that this may be not just about gas mileage but about reducing the pollution from those clunkers.
Also with limited funds, they have to prioritize.
