Raskal
big member, little pay
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2002
- Posts
- 926
I'm pretty sure most Euro diesels, although they have good fuel economy, don't meet US emissions standards and that's why they aren't available domestically.
They have for some time met 49 state standards (Cali being the odd one out) but now the Germans are all bringing or already have clean diesels that meet all state standards for this model year.
The Jetta TDI is a 50 state car, just won the "Green Car of the Year" title over two hybrids due to better mileage, starts at $21,700 and doesn't use that silly blue-tec system that Merc and BMW are employing.
We had a pre-production version over the summer for a week and averaged 55mpg highway and 40 city. Thing is amazing and has none of the diesel sound or exhaust and tons of torque. Great drive.
For the life of me, I cannot understand the hybrid craze-the technology isn't there and the mileage is often much worse than sticker due to 'real-world' driving. Electric cars are very, very far off for practical use and have absolutely no application in anything but small passenger cars. Look around on the highway, electric simply cannot and will not work for all those trucks that run our economy and yet, idiots in the media continue to assail the big three for not producing enough hybrids...
We have the technology now for clean diesel but thanks to GM's spectacular POS in the 80's (Olds) the American public forever believes that all diesels are terrible. We are once again headed down the wrong path due to politics (ie-the E85 crap), misconceptions and general ignorance. Big surprise.