http://smnr.us/thespookytruth/cartalk.html
11/6/2007 8:48:45 PM
[Edited on November 6, 2007 at 8:56 PM. Reason :
11/6/2007 8:55:34 PM
You are mistaken. By making the various systems listed electrically driven you are able to eliminate their drag on the engine when they are not in use. One of the greatest offenders is power steering and breaking which require hydraulic pumps to maintain pressure even when the specific feature is doing no work. Similarly, even when your air conditioner is off it still has a slip clutch which is burning mechanical energy. The efficiency lost when they are in use will be negligible as the systems are already inefficient because these systems had to be designed to work when the engine was idling, which makes them obsenely wasteful when the engine is at cruising speed. Electrically driven, the vehicles AC will now work about as well at idle as it does at cruising speed while being more energy efficient at cruising speed. That's right, they could even be more efficient while operating because right now the power must flow through a mechanical belt which heats up, wasting energy. If the only accessory being driven directly is the alternator then this belt can be eliminated. Similarly, the AC compressor does not need to be compatible with the variable RPMs of the engine. [Edited on November 6, 2007 at 10:34 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/6/2007 10:26:38 PM
This also reminds me of this article in the latest Ward's Autoworld:http://wardsautoworld.com/ar/auto_curbing_curb_weight/
11/7/2007 9:33:34 AM
check this out
11/7/2007 9:54:49 AM
It's surprising how much of it came (partially) true.AND WHY DO WE NOT HAVE ELECTRO-SUSPENSION CARS?!?!
11/7/2007 10:10:12 AM
beyond the rear-view camera, what else has come true?
11/7/2007 10:13:17 AM
national highways (this film is pre-Eisenhower system, I'd imagine)uniform highway signsilluminated highwaysHUDs in cars"electronic" dashboardsairborne emergency servicessuburbanizationteleconferencinguniform containers
11/7/2007 10:22:11 AM
11/7/2007 11:07:29 AM
It is not that they over predicted, since one could say they were talking about the year 2100. But what is always interesting what they did not predict! The computers in everything were still 1950s primitive with punch cards and clunky knobs. They went overboard on everything BUT what actually changed, computers. However, what I don't get is why they said turbine engines were more efficient, when they certainly are not. [Edited on November 7, 2007 at 12:54 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/7/2007 12:53:09 PM
when people try to predict the future, they always just end up with an exaggerated version of nowin 50s-era science fiction there are flying cars and space colonies in the year 2000, but we're still battling the Soviets and all the women are housewives.
11/7/2007 1:19:18 PM
^^ yeah star trek does the same thing with the whole reel to reel data thing...kinda funnythe data punch card seems to perform a similar function to a debit card or a flash drive/ipodi think the most amazing thing (other than the clean cars) is the sheer lack of traffic on the road^aha i like it when the car splits...the man goes to the office and the woman goes straight to the shopping center[Edited on November 7, 2007 at 1:21 PM. Reason : ]
11/7/2007 1:20:23 PM
I heard that in the year 2150, Starbucks coffee can be sent straight over your myspace account!!!
11/7/2007 1:20:46 PM
So what is the real verdict for why the American car makers are getting their asses kicked? Is it really that the designs/interiors are garbage? Are the designs interiors garbage because of steel tariffs? Are American workers just lazy? Unions? A combination of all the above?GM lost 1.6 billion if you exclude it's financing wing. Ford is set to report a loss of 1 billion. Chrysler is laying off 11000 hourly and salaried jobs.Toyota reported positive profits, one analyst is forecasting modest growth for Honda going forward, Nissan reported an 8.8% increase in sales YOY.The American makers need to just die.
11/7/2007 2:11:07 PM
i think part of it was when SUVs were selling like hotcakes, they overproduced them, then sales declined and they were stuck with a bunch of vehicles that weren't selling
11/7/2007 3:48:49 PM
11/7/2007 3:55:08 PM
But without this type of coercion, they're an impediment to change. Sure, consumers want smart cars, but the popularity of SUVs demonstrates that a significant portion of us will also pretty much buy whatever's marketed to us.As long as the big three are spending millions glamorizing inefficient vehicles, there will be a market for them. Make it difficult to sell inefficient autos, and the big 3 will stop marketing them, and demand will go down.
11/7/2007 11:41:44 PM
What an odd theory Boone. If what you say is true then why market vehicles which cost so much to produce? Why not market the Ford Escort to them and charge SUV prices? If the people buy whatever is marketed to them then how the hell does any company ever lose money? I'm sorry, this theory of yours is just not plausible. It is far more likely that people just like driving around in and owning SUVs and you find it easier to believe people are mindless sheep than that they could possibly disagree with your opinions on the subject.
11/8/2007 12:19:03 AM
we have to make it a national priority to have new carson the 'global warming' side, pollution in cities is bad...it's not good for our lungs or our sceneryon the 'terrorism' side, we need to have self-sufficient energy...so that we can enjoy our own resources and refuse outside reliance on fuelwe need to invent these technologies, so that other countries will buy our ideas
11/8/2007 12:19:55 AM
11/8/2007 12:43:44 AM
11/8/2007 8:04:48 AM
No no, I like the idea of aimlessly punching holes in Wildlife Preserves and marine habitats to find a finite supply of dead dinosaurs that won't be viable for another 10 years. It will solve all our problems. Once those pesky animals are extinct or at least displaced then we can build condos there and sell them on the idea that it was once a pristine natural environment.
11/8/2007 8:30:41 AM
11/8/2007 11:00:14 AM
11/8/2007 11:03:30 AM
I was being extremely sarcastic. I guess 'Earth gods' works as a loose idea of kami. But being natural beings doesn't limit them simply to planet Earth. Sadly, my knowledge on Wicca is fairly limited so I can not make accurate comparisons between that and Shinto.
11/8/2007 11:24:00 AM
HockeyRoman, I guess you are unaware that on a 200 acre plot of land we can drill into oil deposits anywhere within a 10 mile radius. We don't need to clear the wilderness to drill for oil, just a tiny speck of it.
11/8/2007 2:37:57 PM
Just a tiny speck for drilling...then some more for roadsthen some more for pipelinesthen some more for infrastructure.In other news, my chair has four legs which are one inch square at their base. Therefore my chair only takes 4 square inches of floor space.
11/8/2007 3:25:13 PM
Not to be pickey, but as far as the carpet is concerned you are only using a few square inches. Animals can cross roads and pipelines, so they are not an impediment. Deer manage to survive in Raleigh, so I suspect they will do fine if all they have to avoid is one freight truck or jeep a day.
11/8/2007 3:42:11 PM
Raleigh (or an oil refinery) may be hospitable to some wildlife, but it's certainly not an ideal situation, and when we can do without, we should.
11/8/2007 3:45:45 PM
We have too many deer as it is
11/8/2007 3:52:08 PM
And the alternative, boon? I guess we just do without the oil, we can use Ethanol instead! As such, don't build a 200 acre drilling platform, let us instead build 2,000,000 acres of farms to grow corn. I'm sure the wildlife will much prefer having the entire forest bulldozed than be forced to live in a less than ideal forest with a single two lane dirt road running through it.[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 4:00 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/8/2007 3:59:48 PM
That's obviously a false dilemma.There's a middle ground, and our future certainly doesn't hinge on opening up our wildlife refuges for short-term gain.
11/8/2007 4:40:17 PM
If there is middle ground then why did you present the slippery slope case?
11/8/2007 5:07:24 PM
The middle ground is nukes but you faggots keep cockblocking.
11/8/2007 5:09:12 PM
11/8/2007 9:22:47 PM
Who said it was short term gain?
11/8/2007 10:11:01 PM
Hockeyroman himself said "to find a finite supply of dead dinosaurs that won't be viable for another 10 years". This is not a "short term gain" but a long term investment to provide the energy needed for civilization to the next generation.
11/8/2007 10:21:56 PM
^^I'm sorry, I assumed you were correctly labeling your fallacies.But regardless, it's not a stretch to say that 10 years of cheaper gas is a short term benefit when we're talking about refuges that were set aside for our great*infinity grandchildren^ So the next generation can reap the 10 years of cheaper gas? This is still indisputably a short-term gain when compared to the loss of national treasures.[Edited on November 8, 2007 at 10:28 PM. Reason : ,]
11/8/2007 10:25:31 PM
Geez, did you just fall off the turnip truck yesterday? It will take 10 years before the first barrel of oil is produced. After that it will usually take more than 70 years after that for it to produce its last barrel of oil. Some wells are still producing after over 120 years of continuous operation. But the longevity of wells is not my point. My point is that no wildlife preserve would be destroyed by simply building a road across it. Nearly all mamals do not mind narrow un-fenced roads. The trees certainly do not care. So, please, under what theory would allowing the exploration and drilling of oil in a national wildlife refuge destroy it? These things burn down regularly due to lightning strikes! Whatever we do to it would be a blessing by comparison.
11/8/2007 11:19:30 PM
11/8/2007 11:21:04 PM
I have come to expect this kind of 'humans-first' nonsense from LoneSnark despite that fact that he tends to make some sense on issues that don't involve trying to spin the destruction of habitats. The very idea that we even need places called "National Wildlife Refuges" sickens me. A wildlife refuge; a place protected from plundering by man so that natural inhabitants may thrive. Yet you get these green-eyed cash fanatics who try and minimalize the impact that such things like oil rigs would have. Boone said it correctly, first it's the test holes being drilled, then it's a road, and then a fence, and then a pipeline not to mention the massive construction undertaking. The oil output from the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge has already been discussed and no figure out there showed that drilling here would do a damn thing for "securing energy independence for the next generation". Sean Hannity actually made me realize that this is all a reason for the right to be able to poke at leftist tree huggers (as if it's a bad thing) painting them as America hating, economic obstructionists.
11/9/2007 3:42:08 AM
11/9/2007 10:19:05 AM
11/9/2007 10:26:18 AM
11/9/2007 10:26:43 AM
11/9/2007 11:05:12 AM
11/9/2007 11:25:21 AM
Why would the rich greedy oil company CEO's want to detroy a natural habitat when they know they need natural habitats to go hunting in with their other rich buddies while they're planning on how to fuck the US public out of more money?
11/9/2007 11:38:00 AM
1: I doubt a cat or dog would survive long in the frozen north. 2: oil spills associated with pipelines are small and easily managed if built correctly, so just write strict fines into the sale of the right-of-way3: lots of rats going to be running along the pipelines? 4a) roads are crossable, especially dirt roads with little traffic. Most animals even manage in dense suburban environments such as Raleigh, just check the number of dead deer along 440. What evidence do you have to suggest northern animals are so much less hardy than their southern counterparts? 4b) easy, environmental regulation to keep Z out of the ecosystem. Probably a good idea to keep it out of southern ecosystems too, since down here we even have Humans drinking the water. 4c) again: how stupid do you think animals are that "noise" coming from several miles away will kill them?This is not our first dog-and-pony show. Mankind has done nothing but dive into the unintended consequences of disturbing ecosystems. We grant people degrees in environmental science. We are not as daft as you suggest, we know what the impacts will be: negligible. A few dead animals along the roadway, 200 acres of clearcut trees for slant-drilling platforms, noise pollution. If you ask me, the optimal solution is to auction off whatever part of the habbitat the oil companies want and use the money to set asside more forest land in the southern 50 states. Oil bearing northern land would fetch a high price; could buy and set aside many times that acreage of non-oil bearing land down south. But no, some politicians long ago set asside some land up north, best not change anything, even if it results in more acreage of more diverse habbitats being protected.
11/9/2007 1:29:45 PM
a) You're arguing that things that have happened/are happening elsewhere couldn't possibly happen in future. "Unforeseen" is just that.b) I think you're entirely missing the point of a wildlife refuge. They're not there to ensure the animals "manage" to survive. They're there to preserve original habitat. Developing the land doesn't achieve this end, nor does selling one off and creating another in previously developed land.
11/9/2007 1:40:28 PM
a) if it has happened or is happening elsewhere then it is by definition not "unforseen". b) Again, we are not selling off the refuge, just 0.1% of it. Now this is interesting. What makes you think that land is "original habitat"? This is not an old growth forest; the average lifespan of these trees is less than 100 years. As such, from an engineering perspective replacing one refuge with another will be indestinguishable within 100 years time since the animals surely don't mind relocating. We as humans value natural habitat. It looks pretty and we can go hiking. Animals are cute, so we want to keep them around. There is nothing sacred about "original habitat" unless you yourself attach a religious precept to it. But please do not spout your religious principles to us and expect us to accept them as sacrosanct.
11/9/2007 2:51:11 PM