the minute gas went over $4/gallon, I switched from using mid-grade to premiumcost more, but I'm definitely seeing a mileage increasei probably should have used premium all along since that's what i'm supposed to use for my car...but whatevergas is gas and i'm going to pay for it no matter what, might as well get the most out of it
6/9/2008 4:11:35 PM
i worked with a guy that was also a gas station manager and he said never to buy midgrade
6/9/2008 4:12:53 PM
^Care to Elaborate?
6/9/2008 4:13:43 PM
^ I personally never thought 2 octane should be $.10 more, when 6 octane is $.20 more.
6/9/2008 4:19:08 PM
I'd have to do an actual study of what i get at $/gallon / mpg for each octane... but my gut says it's worth the extra couple bucks to get premium every time. (On a relatively new car that is)
6/9/2008 4:23:02 PM
^he said midgrade is just .5regular + .5premium....said it was a total rip off]
6/9/2008 4:23:53 PM
The higher energy density of premium compared to regular is tiny, no where near the 5% increase in price.
6/9/2008 4:27:55 PM
6/9/2008 4:59:49 PM
the other problem is there's currently only like 2 US shipyards that are certified to build vessels and deal with the nuclear powerplant at the same timewe'd have to outsource to asia (korea and japan? i think is the other one have some of the most advanced shipyards in the world)
6/9/2008 8:09:52 PM
I believe the uranium on military vessels and bombs are military grade and enriched towards 100% of potential. The stuff we use in civilian nuclear plants is only enriched like 10%.Im not sure if they use the lower grade stuff on other vessels though.
6/9/2008 8:31:40 PM
right and right.Korea hasn't been a leader forever, but now, mainly with Dosan industries they're on the same level as Japan. Japan has some of the top heavy industries in the world. Oh, but another possible strong newcomer is, you guessed it, China.A lot of ours are actually... military connected.But those navy reactors are so bomb-grade material they're not funny. Obviously 100% is practically impossible, but they're over 90%, and the exact number will be classified. Seriously, if you had their fuel (unburnt), just a few people with no particular skill could make a cumbersome gun-type kiloton weapon.Any commercial navy rector would be ~20%, because it still needs to be potent, but less than 20% is just how we roll in the commercial world.I bet if they expanded to other types of ships they would back off the percentage. But the rationale is that nearly pure U-235 isn't a proliferation risk because well... the whole god damn ship can blow up the world.[Edited on June 9, 2008 at 9:21 PM. Reason : ]
6/9/2008 9:20:30 PM
Another idea is coal gasification. The United States has more coal than any other country, 35% of easily recoverable coal. Lets use what we have in our own borders, dammit. (Oh, and nuclear too).
6/9/2008 10:58:44 PM
6/10/2008 12:56:43 AM
6/10/2008 11:34:17 AM
What kind of protocols could be put in place to secure the enriched nuclear material?I'm not opposing it, I'm genuinely curious what you guys think could be done to make this a more attractive solution, given that it is fairly dangerous in some circumstances.
6/10/2008 2:33:32 PM
[Edited on June 10, 2008 at 4:05 PM. Reason : /]
6/10/2008 4:03:20 PM
6/10/2008 4:08:32 PM
I'ma vote for McCain, he's gonna have a gas tax holiday for two months. That will positively affect me in a significant way.
6/10/2008 4:10:05 PM
6/10/2008 4:13:10 PM
6/10/2008 5:25:39 PM
You actually pretty much just answered the question I was trying to ask. Thanks.
6/10/2008 6:04:06 PM
Why do ppl in Nevada and NY state not use much gas?
6/10/2008 6:25:10 PM
^My guess for the northeast is that its an older developed part of the country, with things closer together and not as spread out, i.e. suburbia.
6/10/2008 11:27:50 PM
^^ Plus they're richer, so gas price increases don't affect them as much on a percentage of their income as, say, Alabamans.(Can't speak for Nevada as outside of Vegas it's sparsely populated, I guess they're rich or something.)In the case of the cities across the country that are on the very low-end of the range, they also have a high degree of mass transportation use among their population, so a gas increase for the bus or train or whatever gets spread across many people.[Edited on June 11, 2008 at 9:07 AM. Reason : /]
6/11/2008 9:05:48 AM
I see where this is coming from now. It would be useful to see a map of straight gas use per person. As it is, northern Virgina looks like low use That's not true, the DC area has either the longest or second longest commute time in the nation, the fact that they make so much money only makes the oil market less flexible there. The truth is, people in Alabama, even if they drive much less, are the ones who will cut use, so government workers in DC can keep their use constant, because they simply don't have the money to pay for it.
6/11/2008 10:43:33 AM