How Fares The Hybrid Vehicles?
A few of my friends had just jumpstarted plans to acquire hybrid cars. Toyota Prius to be exact. And to the best of my knowledge, this vogue isn't limited to my private circle of friends. Just all over United States, people are fast dispensing money to car manufacturers in order to join the massive social statement made bandwagon of hybrid vehicles.
To date, hybrid cars are the most successful entry for hybrid vehicles. Amidst vehicle designs that run on hydrogen fuel, solar power, or hydraulics, it is only the hybrid vehicle that surfaced as the most successful, on the social sense at least since diesel electric trains can also be called successful designs of hybrid vehicles. Hybrid cars run on petroleum and electricity, and thus by combining negates the weaknesses of both technologies.
Two Efficient Technologies Combined To Produce The Best Solution
Summing it all up, by giving gasoline engines an electrical assist, hybrid vehicles have juiced more out of already efficient (if not frugal) vehicles. The problem with pure electricity powered vehicles, as we can do well by remembering General Motors' foray into electric vehicles have been many. One of them is the abysmal length of time needed to recharge the batteries, around 45 minutes to 15 hours, and another is the very limited travel range of electric vehicles, only between 60 to 80 miles on full charge.
But by combining the electric engine into the gasoline chassis, there is no need for recharge since just by running alone charges the battery. If the battery is low, the gasoline engine kicks in, thereby recharging the batteries while the commuter won't be stranded due to a dead car. There are lots of benefits, but the most pronounced are fuel conservation on stop and go traffic, to less smoke emissions and less noise while maintaining cruising speeds on city lanes.
The government, environmentalists and the entrepreneurs are equally thrilled by the way hybrid vehicles are received by the public. Already the sales of hybrid vehicles, particularly the Toyota Prius and the Honda Insight, have been increasing at a high-speed rate as the bigger population of the American people are swapping their old cars for the latest hybrid vehicles models. And its not even on fuel economy and fiscal savings, its just a general desire to do good to the environment.
At the rate hybrid vehicles are selling, it's only a matter of time before these vehicles take over the entire car population. And surely, by this time, all the hybrid car detractors would be very silent.