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prozac
11th August 2008, 04:25 PM
The whole idea of the carbon tax is to gently 'encourage' us all to move to a life with a smaller carbon footprint. The simple fact is that people don't like major change. I'm sure that most of us would be quite happy if we could keep on burning cheap fossil fuels all our lives & the lives of generations to come if we could.
But we can't.

The whole idea of a carbon tax is just that, TAX. Been watching the Olympics? What, hard to see some events? Australians paying a carbon tax is not going to stop countries like China choking the begesus out of the world. Maybe a tax on the raw material we export to China would have a more direct result.

I will tell you one thing for certain, if your kids can't afford a house now then they certainly won't be able to once the carbon tax comes in.

The Carbon Tax will increase the cost of building materials, and this will be the catalyst for the next real estate boom. Cost of building a new house goes up so the cost of buying an existing house skyrockets. Don't believe me? Mark it in your diaries then and come back to me a year or two into the tax.

prozac

ps: Labour would do more good if it encouraged us to install environmentally useful enrgy systems such as solar hot water, PVcells on the roof etc. Remember the stuff the Libs brought in and Labour is shutting down.

Waldo
11th August 2008, 04:26 PM
:whs: too. :2tsup:

Ashore
11th August 2008, 04:56 PM
ps: Labour would do more good if it encouraged us to install environmentally useful enrgy systems such as solar hot water, PVcells on the roof etc. Remember the stuff the Libs brought in and Labour is shutting down.
Mate whats the point I already mentioned this and rattrap ignored it and went into a rant on phone batteries , mabye he should look at VRB battery technology that has been assisted by the last gov as well , bottom line is when you get someone who referes to "howard and his cronies " for the libs but " Mr Rudd" for the labor Pm you realize where their mindset is and don't bother :no:

GekoMan
11th August 2008, 05:10 PM
Too true. Except that CO2 is not pollution.
Also there is no valid reason for reducing ones carbon footprint.

The world isn't going to run out of coal or natural gas for a long time yet. Hence there is no need to reduce consumption of those fossil fuels.

Chinese coal power stations use very old technology which put lots of soot and other crap like Sulphur into the atmosphere. Modern technology coal power stations are very clean and they only really produce steam and CO2 which are not pollutants.

Oil on the other hand will peak at some point and any way it is exported from countries that don't like us much. Hence we should move away from a dependence on oil at least for transport fuel. Not due to CO2 but because it is risky.

Greg Q
11th August 2008, 05:11 PM
.

What is wrong with the atmosphere we have?
When you say buy a better atmosphere - what specifically would make it "better"?



As you know it was rhetorical. Sarcasm is just one of the many services that I offer.

Originally Posted by Rattrap
The whole idea of the carbon tax is to gently 'encourage' us all to move to a life with a smaller carbon footprint. The simple fact is that people don't like major change. I'm sure that most of us would be quite happy if we could keep on burning cheap fossil fuels all our lives & the lives of generations to come if we could.
But we can't.

I tend to agree that less consumption would be a good thing on many levels, economic not the least of them. My point is that since the average family is going to get an income tax break to offset the carbon credits that there will be no disincentive. The heaviest emitters will be compensated for carbon credit costs-no encouragement there either.

The labor party has to come to grips with the fact that they can't change people's behaviour while at the same frigging time shelter them from all consequences of their own actions. It's the kind of muddled thinking that leads to phonics and political correctness. Dwarfs, all of them.

GekoMan
11th August 2008, 05:27 PM
:wts::flog:

Rattrap
11th August 2008, 05:54 PM
when you get someone who referes to "howard and his cronies " for the libs but " Mr Rudd" for the labor Pm you realize where their mindset is and don't bother :no:
LOL.
Howard & his cronies earned my ere, Mr Rudd & his cronies are yet to. I won't be holding my breath tho he is a polition at the end of the day.

"ps: Labour would do more good if it encouraged us to install environmentally useful enrgy systems such as solar hot water, PVcells on the roof etc."
I agree completly & just don't understand why they arn't when other countries have done just that successfully. I think the answer my be in the massive amounts of coal we dig out of the ground every year & the wads of cash that goes into govt coffers as a result.

Have u never missed reading a post before Ashore? ffs.:doh:

damian
12th August 2008, 09:11 AM
Photovoltaics aren't green. It takes more energy to make them than they can ever produce. Something about melting sand...:)

Lots of so called green things are not enviromentally friendly and all the talk about them is propoganda and hype. Hybrid cars are a good example, and much public transport, but fanatics on both sides never let the facts get in the way of a good rant.

Now if we could get that $8k rebate for installing wind power at home...

Sebastiaan56
12th August 2008, 09:55 AM
Photovoltaics aren't green. It takes more energy to make them than they can ever produce. Something about melting sand...:)

Lots of so called green things are not enviromentally friendly and all the talk about them is propoganda and hype. Hybrid cars are a good example, and much public transport, but fanatics on both sides never let the facts get in the way of a good rant.

Now if we could get that $8k rebate for installing wind power at home...

The tool that determines the veracity of these claims is called Life Cycle Analysis (LCA), here are a couple of links on PV LCA's, http://www.clca.columbia.edu/papers/Fthenakis_RE06_Japan_10_06.pdf (check the last, summary slide) and http://www.energybulletin.net/node/17219 I know it wouldnt cut it in a lot of corporations but the claimed 2-8 years seems OK to me.

As for hybrids and public transport where do you get this opinion from?

I personally believe that this is where we should be going with solar technology http://www.abc.net.au/rn/scienceshow/stories/2008/2303970.htm#transcript as usual the Aussie governemnts are not interested, something about coal revenues... I reckon we should put one on every roof.

prozac
12th August 2008, 01:41 PM
Photovoltaics aren't green. It takes more energy to make them than they can ever produce. Something about melting sand...:)

Lots of so called green things are not enviromentally friendly and all the talk about them is propoganda and hype. Hybrid cars are a good example, and much public transport, but fanatics on both sides never let the facts get in the way of a good rant.

Now if we could get that $8k rebate for installing wind power at home...

damian has made a good point about energy required to manufacture these "green" alternatives. Toyota's electric car is a good point. I believe that they can never justify environmentally the carbon cost of manufacturing them. Just good marketing.

PV cells have a calculated payback in dollar terms of about 20-25 years on todays Australian electricity charges. In places like Germany the payback is something like 7 years because the government returns the metered supply on a basis of 4:1. Maybe also the carbon cost of manufacturing the PV cells is not justified.

BUT... I believe that if we are not encouraged to install PV cells to feed back into the sytem then the cost both real and in carbon terms of supplying (transporting) electrical energy via wires across the country will become exhorbitant. This is because of the cost of installing new and of maintaining existing systems. With an ever increasing population governments will have antiquated elecrtical supply systems that will need massive amounts of maintenance and upgrade. New supply sytems will need to be installed across the country from wherever new power stations are to be built. It will not be the construction costs of new power stations that is the issue, it will be the cost of transporting the electrical power from the generators to the consumer that will cripple us.

If households become mini power stations then the size and cost of the supply system will not become burdensome. The carbon cost of supplying the material for these systems will far outway the carbon cost of manufacturing PV cells. Installation of PV cells to homes will reduce stress on the electrical wire system and on supply. It would be nice if we had wind generators also but the noise would be excessive in suburban areas.

As to pay-back times, I think as the power generation systems become more loaded the cost of electrical energy will increase tosuch an extent that the PV cells will pay for themselves in much less time than 20 or so years.

prozac

damian
12th August 2008, 02:22 PM
That's interesting. It contradicts every other study I've seen on energy payback times for PV's.

I'm prepared to believe I'm wrong, but I'd want to see the sources and ultimately the raw data that presentation is based on. Ditto the second link. I spent way too long in research to believe anyone is without bias. It's really easy to cobble together a convincing demo taylored to suit your sponsors desired outcome. Having said that everything I've read on the subject for years could have been based on flawed analysis or hearsay...

As for hybrids and PT I've done some modelling of my own based on the best sources I could find for trains and busses, and I've read a couple of things on total energy/pollution of hybrids. The numbers for PT are rubbery, depends on many assumptions, but we came up with a figure of 55 people per carraige to offset 1.4 per car. So if there is less than 55 people per carraige on your train it's costing more pollution to move you 1 kilometer than if there were an average 1.4 ppl per car travelling the same distance. Busses are probably a lot better.

Meh.

Edit: I never said PV's are bad. I quite like them and will fit them on my roof in an instant when I move house, but not because I assume they will reduce pollution. What bugs me is extremists on both sides of politics who grab a sliver of information and develop it into a complete world view to suit their POV. The snowball grows until our wonderful government starts spending my taxes in accordance with this myth, whichever myth it happens to be.

Sebastiaan56
14th August 2008, 06:48 AM
That's interesting. It contradicts every other study I've seen on energy payback times for PV's.

I'm prepared to believe I'm wrong, but I'd want to see the sources and ultimately the raw data that presentation is based on. Ditto the second link. I spent way too long in research to believe anyone is without bias. It's really easy to cobble together a convincing demo taylored to suit your sponsors desired outcome. Having said that everything I've read on the subject for years could have been based on flawed analysis or hearsay...

As for hybrids and PT I've done some modelling of my own based on the best sources I could find for trains and busses, and I've read a couple of things on total energy/pollution of hybrids. The numbers for PT are rubbery, depends on many assumptions, but we came up with a figure of 55 people per carraige to offset 1.4 per car. So if there is less than 55 people per carraige on your train it's costing more pollution to move you 1 kilometer than if there were an average 1.4 ppl per car travelling the same distance. Busses are probably a lot better.

Meh.

Edit: I never said PV's are bad. I quite like them and will fit them on my roof in an instant when I move house, but not because I assume they will reduce pollution. What bugs me is extremists on both sides of politics who grab a sliver of information and develop it into a complete world view to suit their POV. The snowball grows until our wonderful government starts spending my taxes in accordance with this myth, whichever myth it happens to be.

I though that article was interesting as well. Technology does move on so Im sure its what you buy and what methodology you use. Personally I think solar/steam combinations are the future but Im not sure there is the political will as the donations still come from carbon and nuclear based suppliers. Hot water can be stored, this was always the major (realistic) objection to PV.

I agree about the public transport, all of those trains running throughout the night with less than 20 people, major waste of all kinds of resources. Ive driven a Prius for 6 years now (Im on my second) and even with daily motorway driving I average 5.2l / 100km. It is the shop car so I mainly use it as a ute. Service costs $200 every 10k, it really has saved money over the last six months.

Im a big fan of the science show as they do have regular technology updates.

damian
14th August 2008, 08:32 AM
You turn your prius over every 3-5 years ? What about the battery change ? that kicks in at 5 years or something doesn't it ? have you had a quote ?

I believe the diesel golf gets similar economy to the prius. Even with diesel at current prices a friend with one is laughing all the way to the bank.

I really like mirror arrays. Simple, well understood, long life, as you say storable for base load. I haven't found any downside to them and of course australia isn't short of sunny plains. As you say no big money behind them to lobby (bribe) the government.

A chap from the PV industry on Alan Cohla (sp?) few weeks back made an interesting point. The coal fired industry is heavily subsidised in Australia, the PV and other alternative industries really aren't. He was actually quite right in asking for a level playing field. They often aren't and such complaints are often a way of beating your drum, but this chap was actually correct.

Eastie
14th August 2008, 08:59 AM
When they put forward a system that hits everyone fairly and squarely between the eyes I will support it. The current concept is to hit a relatively small number hard, sit back and see what happens. In gold for intance most mines are predicted to close operations and focus offshore due to margin errosion of such a scheme and there will likely be little investment in any further exploration..Nickel wouldn't be far behind. Ramp this across a number of heavy industries the support the economy and the picture becomes a little clearer. Dont expect to hit industry and not have them hit back.

Sebastiaan56
14th August 2008, 03:58 PM
You turn your prius over every 3-5 years ? What about the battery change ? that kicks in at 5 years or something doesn't it ? have you had a quote ?

Nah the first Prius went when I got made redundant, the second one is almost 4 years old. No battery issues yet but I figure that five years is a long time in battery technology (think Moore's Law) and I thought it was eight years, btw heard of Toyota motors lasting 350,000 km so Im not that worried,


A chap from the PV industry on Alan Cohla (sp?) few weeks back made an interesting point. The coal fired industry is heavily subsidised in Australia, the PV and other alternative industries really aren't. He was actually quite right in asking for a level playing field. They often aren't and such complaints are often a way of beating your drum, but this chap was actually correct.

Ah yes the crunch, pollies have to pay the piper, the unions for Labour or big business for the Libs. One day we will have a democracy, but thats another conversation.

nt900
6th April 2009, 11:59 PM
You turn your prius over every 3-5 years ? What about the battery change ? that kicks in at 5 years or something doesn't it ? have you had a quote ?

I believe the diesel golf gets similar economy to the prius. Even with diesel at current prices a friend with one is laughing all the way to the bank.

I really like mirror arrays. Simple, well understood, long life, as you say storable for base load. I haven't found any downside to them and of course australia isn't short of sunny plains. As you say no big money behind them to lobby (bribe) the government.

A chap from the PV industry on Alan Cohla (sp?) few weeks back made an interesting point. The coal fired industry is heavily subsidised in Australia, the PV and other alternative industries really aren't. He was actually quite right in asking for a level playing field. They often aren't and such complaints are often a way of beating your drum, but this chap was actually correct.

My Prius more than 5 years old and battery likely to last another 5 years I guess.

The fuel economy is great. Unlike other 'eco' cars like small turbo-diesels, it's not just about saving fuel, but reducing emissions as well. I feel positively prehistoric sitting at the lights in a conventional vehicle burning fuel and pumping out emissions. Eve when the car is driving the petrol motor probably only runs 50% of the time. Eg. initial take off, coasting, reducing speed - all done with the motor off, no fuel burning and no emissions.


damian has made a good point about energy required to manufacture these "green" alternatives. Toyota's electric car is a good point. I believe that they can never justify environmentally the carbon cost of manufacturing them. Just good marketing.

Hi Prozac - What source are you quoting?

damian
7th April 2009, 12:44 PM
You have added to a fairly old thread, but anyway...

Have a look online about the prious. If your thinking about the enviromental impact of any product you need to do a holistic analysis, manufacture, disposal as well as use. A prious is a wonderful marketing sucess, but it's not particularly enviromentally sound. The pollution load in making and transporting teh raw materials for the batteries for example is signifigant.

nt900
7th April 2009, 12:55 PM
You have added to a fairly old thread, but anyway...

Have a look online about the prious. If your thinking about the enviromental impact of any product you need to do a holistic analysis, manufacture, disposal as well as use. A prious is a wonderful marketing sucess, but it's not particularly enviromentally sound. The pollution load in making and transporting teh raw materials for the batteries for example is signifigant.

I totally agree about whole of life cycle analysis. I am just concerned that people 'quote' information but don't point to the sources.

There is obviously an impact in making any component for a vehicle. But, do the batteries require more resources in their product life cycle versus the fuel product life cycle (that is the equivalent amount of fuel saved by operating the Prius)?

I don't know the answer to this, but I would love to see a reputable authorities analysis to find out.

GekoMan
7th April 2009, 02:08 PM
The majority of these environmental evaluations are false for a simple reason. They tend to assume that the conversion of carbon from a solid or liquid form into a gas form is bad for the environment. This is a false assumption for two main reasons:
(a) This assumption isn't supported by the known scientific facts.
(b) "bad for the environment" means bad for life. However current projections of the climate are good for most life forms. An ice age would be an example of a bad environment.

nt900
7th April 2009, 02:16 PM
The majority of these environmental evaluations are false for a simple reason. They tend to assume that the conversion of carbon from a solid or liquid form into a gas form is bad for the environment. This is a false assumption for two main reasons:
(a) This assumption isn't supported by the known scientific facts.
(b) "bad for the environment" means bad for life. However current projections of the climate are good for most life forms. An ice age would be an example of a bad environment.

I am not sure the evaluations are false, but you raise an interesting point: "man and other components of the ecosystem he needs to survive and prosper" versus "the other life forms and the ecosystem he needs to survive and prosper".

I know which one will get the popular vote. :)

What do you mean by "This assumption isn't supported by the known scientific facts."? I think there are plenty of facts behind the assumption 'bad for the environment' - but as you point out, it comes down to perspective on man vs. everything else.

Personally, I would like both man and everything else to survive and prosper. I feel like John Lennon - "Imagine all the ........." etc

damian
7th April 2009, 02:49 PM
I don't have time, and probably lack the inclination anyway, to either find the info for you or do a proper analysis. I am sure a search engine will lead you to the many good sites questioning climate change evangelism.

As for CO2, the CCE's claim it's the major greenhouse GAS, that it is responsible for about 30% of the greenhouse effect caused by GASES and they themselves admit that MAYBE 7% of the CO2 produced comes from human activities.

The problem with this is the word GAS. You see about 95% of the insulating quality of teh artmosphere is dues to water vapour, which conveniently isn't a gas. It is a fluid, but not a gas, probably better described as a suspended aerosol. Thus even if you accept the CCE's assertions human produced CO2 is responsible for 7% of 30% of 5%, 0.105% ? or there abouts ?

And it's not like it's cumulative or anything :) because it's merrily absorbed as fast as it's produced by a mysterious big word: photosynthesis...

The reality is that if CO2 levels ever got high enough to really matter to global temperatures we wouldn't be too concerned about it, we'd all have long since chocked to death.

2 footnotes.

First I am in no way endorsing pollution. The problem is the CCE has nothing to do with mitigating pollution nor saving the enviroment. It's about putting money in the pockets of amoral people who have hopped on this pollitical bandwagon for their own ends.

Second, I am prepared to believe there is some secondary effect but I have not found anything in the literature I've read and if there were then you would expect the CCE's to wax lyrical about it to support thier claims. Ever prepared to accept I'm missing something.

mic-d
7th April 2009, 04:57 PM
I don't have time, and definitely lack the inclination anyway, to either find the info for you or do a proper analysis (of your argument) suffice to say water vapour is a gas. You should get the fundamentals right before launching into a pseudo-scientific analysis of enormously complicated theories (both for and against). It's not a good look.

Cheers
Michael

silentC
7th April 2009, 05:28 PM
I think Damien may be referring to clouds, which are formed from small droplets of liquid water, not from water vapour.

According to Wikipedia (it's convenient but there are references), water vapour (the gas) alone contributes between 36-70% of the greenhouse effect. Including clouds, the figure is given as 66-85%. CO2 is given as 9-26% of the total effect. So it is 7% of 9-26%, not 7% of 30% of 5%. Still a relatively small number, but then in these types of non-linear systems, I guess there is a threshold value beyond which changes occur exponentially. So maybe 7% of 9% is enough to push it over the edge.

BTW referring to proponents as evangelists is a bit perjorative isn't it?

mic-d
7th April 2009, 07:39 PM
I think Damien may be referring to clouds, which are formed from small droplets of liquid water, not from water vapour.


So you can read between the lines:D:wink:

Cheers
Michael

damian
8th April 2009, 10:09 AM
Did you mean pejorative ? Only if you regard the word evangelist as derogatory.

Evangelist: a person marked by evangelical enthusiasm for or support of any cause.

There are obviously other definitions specific to religeon but that's the context of my use.

mic-d:

gas: Physics. a substance possessing perfect molecular mobility and the property of indefinite expansion, as opposed to a solid or liquid.

So when does a suspended areosol become a true gas ? because the CCE's just love to ignore water vapour and clouds in their figures.

It's a rhetorical question by the way.

Also from wikipedia. I had read this some time ago, from a reliable source, but had forgotten about it:

Water vapor is also a potent greenhouse gas (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_gas). Because the water vapor content of the atmosphere is expected to greatly increase in response to warmer temperatures, there is the potential for a water vapor feedback (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_vapor_feedback) that could amplify the expected climate warming effect due to increased carbon dioxide (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dioxide) alone. However, it is less clear how cloudiness would respond to a warming climate; depending on the nature of the response, clouds could either further amplify or partly mitigate the water vapor feedback.

So there is a possible secondary effect. Odd you don't hear much about it but I suppose the CCE's are now so convinced they have everyone scared they have moved beyond justifying their religeon and are onto the confession and pennance phase.

silentC
8th April 2009, 10:31 AM
the insulating quality of teh artmosphere is dues to water vapour ... enviroment ... pollitical ... religeon ... pennance Damien I wouldn't get too smart about correct spelling mate :)


they have moved beyond justifying their religeon [sic] and are onto the confession and pennance [sic] phaseYou know very well that 'evangelism' in this context carries, and is intended to carry, a derogatory connotation. Don't play coy with me. You are attempting to frame the pro climate change viewpoint as a religious one and therefore not able to bear up to scientific analysis. Now whilst I agree that there is a lot we don't understand about the whole process, attempting to squash the pro debate by characterising it this way is not helpful to anyone.

nt900
8th April 2009, 10:37 AM
This topic gets sticky easily doesn't it. :(

All I was after was to be pointed to reputable sources of information bagging hybrid cars and specifically the Prius. Being a driver of one for five years I am pretty comfortable about owning one compared to many other vehicles I could have purchased at the time. But if someone has some information that makes it clear they are worse off for the environment than the alternative people usually buy, please point it out.

damian
8th April 2009, 10:54 AM
No no no, absolutely not. I was just clarifying if that's the word you meant.

I guess the religeous connotations are somewhat derogatory, and I failed to specifically clarify that I acknowledge that the anti CCEs are also not always objective, and I include myself in that statment.

I suppose my primary objection to this is not the competing interpretations of the data, but the politicising (in the broader sense) of the issue.

I don't dispute that pollution is a bad thing, and I expect few would defend it. Whether the CCE's are right or not reducing our pollution load would deliver the desired result. Instead of concentrating on that end we are distracted by photo ops, so called enviromental groups with their hands out for our money either directly or via our taxes, beaurocrats building empires and a load of media frenzy.

Really CC is irrelevant. Unless someone is proposing a major world wide intervention to our atmosphere and enviroment basically all we can do, whether it's real or not, whether it's big or small, is to reduce our pollution load. All I've seen so far is a lot of talkfests and ranting rent a crowd protesters.

Conversely, we have been progressively, demonstratively and intelligently reducing our pollution load for decades. In fact if you study old court records as far back as the industrial revolution there have been signifigant wins for the community and enviroment over industry. If we were still creating as much pollution per head as we were in the 70's we'd all be choked to death. Remember acid rain ? those rank brown cloudes that hung all the time over our cities ?

My point is we should be vigilant about pollution. We should all examine our lifestyles and endeavour to reduce our individual contribution, and we should make our representatives aware we care about this stuff, but we shouldn't be distracted by chicken little grandstanding. The people who promote that stuff are evil amoral liars. They don't care about you, and they don't care about the enviroment. They do what they do to stroke their egos and line their pockets. They are responsible for money wasted and money not spent of research and action and legislation that might really do some good. I find that annoying.

Perhaps that makes my position a little clearer. I don't always express myself well.

silentC
8th April 2009, 11:04 AM
I suppose my primary objection to this is not the competing interpretations of the data, but the politicising (in the broader sense) of the issue.
I think it's the way the world works though. A scientist on his own will have bugger all chance of convincing people to change their behaviour. Politics and public relations are everything in this world.

Do you ever watch The Gruen Transfer on the ABC? There was an interesting spot on bottled water last week. It is one of the greatest coups of the advertising world that not only are they able to sell something that people could get more or less for free at home, but they also have people being loyal to a brand of bottled water. I mean come on, how stupid are we?

In light of that, the only way anyone is going to convince people of the importance of the issue (assuming there is one) is by approaching the problem on that level. So you can't blame them.

damian
8th April 2009, 11:12 AM
This topic gets sticky easily doesn't it. :(

All I was after was to be pointed to reputable sources of information bagging hybrid cars and specifically the Prius. Being a driver of one for five years I am pretty comfortable about owning one compared to many other vehicles I could have purchased at the time. But if someone has some information that makes it clear they are worse off for the environment than the alternative people usually buy, please point it out.

Don't sweat it :) There are a few of us here to like to vent, usually at each other...

I am sure if you do a search someone somewhere will have a web page with a proper analysis of the total pollution load of the prius compared to some similar conventional cars. My suggestion would be a similar size diesel, like the golf 1.9. There was some work done in Japan, oh probably about 10 years ago, that claimed diesel produces traces of super toxic chemicals. I can't refute it with certainty but I am suspicious of the paper. My basis is I know we did a lot of work on diesel emmissions back in the 70's and 80's with none of this showing up. I acknowledge that diesel formulations may have changed, but I am still suspicious. Most of the soot etc produced by diesels is biodegradable and of course it can be produced economically from truely renewable sources, so it's a pretty good choice. The total cost of ownership is also solid. I can personally vouch that the golf 2.0 TDi is a wicked drive, absolutely spectacular car. Only thing I don't like is the biwire loom.

Perception is a funny thing. I've got a 95 fairlane. Most people would say it's a fuel guzzler, yet it gets about the same fuel economy as a impreza base model and slightly better than a lexus is200. Be aware that for most cars fuel consumption is driven greatly by the way you drive, and below 80 km/hr (around town) by the weight of the car. Over 80 (highway) aerodynamicas overtakes weight because of wind resistance and the lesser braking and accelerating. My car is 1700 kg and returns similar fuel economy to other rwd petrol cars 1.5-2 tonne. Other important factors are whether the drive is turned 90 degrees (which is why front transverse engined cars get better economy) and of course factors like fuel type and unusual driveline losses (4wd).

2c..

damian
8th April 2009, 11:21 AM
People ahve been recognising problems and rallying support for solutions for, well for as long as recorded history. My objection is:

1. They lie.

2. They aren't pursuing a real solution.

3. They are trying to make money or promote themselves instead of pursuing a real solution.

The world isn't perfect, in so many ways, doesn't mean I have to like it.

I haven't been watching this series, I keep meaning to tape it, maybe this week. Regarding bottled water, well it doesn't have the amount of flouride and chlorine that tap water has, and if I'm somewhere where there is no available tap/bubbler but I can get a bottle of water for $1 or $2 I'm buying convenience. Afterall I have feet if I want transport. Why board a bus ?

Big Shed
8th April 2009, 11:23 AM
Nah the first Prius went when I got made redundant, the second one is almost 4 years old. No battery issues yet but I figure that five years is a long time in battery technology (think Moore's Law) and I thought it was eight years, btw heard of Toyota motors lasting 350,000 km so Im not that worried,



My Prius more than 5 years old and battery likely to last another 5 years I guess.


I have been following this discussion and find it interesting to see what drives people to make certain, fairly major, decisions as to what they purchase.

The above 2 statements absolutely floored me, here are 2 people that decided that a Toyota Prius was the right car for them.

Neither of them took in to account the cost and life cycle of the battery bank in this car.

So, I am interested to know, what did ypou base your decision on?

I am not being critical of your decision, I am just curious what parameters you used to arrive at that decision.

Anthony, you keep asking other people to point you in the direction of a "good" analysis of the fors and againsts of the Toyota Prius, surely you did all that analysis before you made the decision to purchase one?

I have spent a lot of my working life in getting big manufacturing projects up and running and if I had gone to my fellow directors with statements such as "I guess they will last another 5 years" I don't think I would have lasted very long.

silentC
8th April 2009, 11:27 AM
My objection isYour 3 points sum up all politics and advertising in a nutshell.


it doesn't have the amount of flouride and chlorine that tap water hasThe water in bottled water is, generally speaking, straight out of the tap. We're talking water like Pump etc. Mineral water is a different beast.


if I'm somewhere where there is no available tap/bubbler but I can get a bottle of water for $1 or $2 I'm buying convenienceWhy not take a water bottle with you?

Did you know that it takes more water to make a bottle of water than you get in the bottle?

The real point here is not about the water - it's a convenience item as you say. The point being made was that they have been able to create brand-loyalty based on the shape of the bottle, colour of the label, and the advertising campaign. They can't differentiate the product, so they differentiate the container. And we fall for it.

damian
8th April 2009, 12:02 PM
Your 3 points sum up all politics and advertising in a nutshell.

Maybe i don't like all politics and advertising ? :D



The water in bottled water is, generally speaking, straight out of the tap. We're talking water like Pump etc. Mineral water is a different beast.

Why not take a water bottle with you?

Did you know that it takes more water to make a bottle of water than you get in the bottle?

The real point here is not about the water - it's a convenience item as you say. The point being made was that they have been able to create brand-loyalty based on the shape of the bottle, colour of the label, and the advertising campaign. They can't differentiate the product, so they differentiate the container. And we fall for it.

I don't know what "pump" is. I can taste a difference in what comes out of my tap and what I taste in coles bottled water, which I very occasionally buy. I haven't done the tests myself but I have seen claims that there are less contaminents. I filter my water at home.

Occasionally I forget, or run out of what I have, so I spend.

I accept people pay for superficial and irrelevant things. Cosmetics spring to mind. In fact you can make the argument about the prius. It remains to be seen if anyone can find a proper analysis of it's pollution load, but I very much expect the total cost of ownership isn't better than contemporary cars. People buy it because of the perception it's a good thing. I would be surprised if most of it's customers really understood what they have bought. That doesn't make the decision bad, but it doesn't make it informed either. As has been said here before, it is unreasonable for every consumer to become an authority on every product prior to purchase. We place our trust in advice and information form various sources, and advertisers exploit that trust, in this case quite effectively.

The emperors new clothes ? :)

Edit: quick search

http://reliableanswers.com/general/prius_v_hummer.asp

mildly amusing but nothing concret (which is also a maor polluter :) )

silentC
8th April 2009, 12:14 PM
Well as a guy pointed out on the radio the other day, when you buy an electric car, you aren't carbon neutral - all you are doing is transferring your carbon footprint from your car to the power station. As long as power is being generated by burning coal, you haven't really done anything.

Pump is a brand of bottled water. It has a 'sports' type nozzle so that you can drink it while you are jogging I presume. But it is just filtered tap water bottled in factory somewhere.

BobL
8th April 2009, 12:27 PM
Well as a guy pointed out on the radio the other day, when you buy an electric car, you aren't carbon neutral - all you are doing is transferring your carbon footprint from your car to the power station. As long as power is being generated by burning coal, you haven't really done anything.

Now we're getting somewhere, . . . . if nuclear power is used then . . . . .

Also, we are already at the point where if a solar collector is placed on the car and parked outside the battery can be charged during the day. In addition a solar collector on a home can put energy back into the grid and then pulled off at night to recharge the car. Several enthusiasts have done this with small cars already.

The most significant thing about vehicles like the Prius is not the instant carbon saving but showing the public that an electric car is not a toy and contributing to half way house technology cost savings. Prius type vehicles gets new technologies onto the production line and makes them more affordable. We have to start somewhere. A revolutionary all electric vehicle is not going to happen overnight.

Waldo
8th April 2009, 12:33 PM
Now we're getting somewhere, . . . . if nuclear power is used then . . . . .

Also, we are already at the point where if a solar collector is placed on the car and parked outside the battery can be charged during the day. In addition a solar collector on a home can put energy back into the grid and then pulled off at night to recharge the car. Several enthusiasts have done this with small cars already.

The most significant thing about vehicles like the Prius is not the instant carbon saving but showing the public that an electric car is not a toy and contributing to half way house technology cost savings. Prius type vehicles gets new technologies onto the production line and makes them more affordable. We have to start somewhere. A revolutionary all electric vehicle is not going to happen overnight.

What you both said. :2tsup:

In a way, it's like Madona or the latest Hollywood bimbo, stealing a kid for 'adoption' from an impoverished country. But what are they really doing and what do they think they are achieving and what are the ramifications of what they think they are doing?

damian
8th April 2009, 02:15 PM
Yes I'd thought about that, the value of adopting new ideas in order to encourage more new ideas. Sticky. The hybrid potentially addresses one of the serious limitations of the internal combustion engine. It's efficiency drops off as you move away from it's optimum revs. A lot of work has been done to address that, but the modern engine is still a pretty second rate compromise. This is why so much work was put into an infinitely variable transmission. Anyway...

The problem is the hybrid as it's deployed doesn't lead anywhere. As I understand it the car switches from the electric motor to the petrol for actual drive, it doesn't use the petrol to generate electricity and use the motor all the time. I don't know this so correct me if I'm wrong. The Nimh batteries aren't particularly efficient, I think about 60%. Apparently lithium ion are very efficient, which brings us to the real bugbear of all these electric and pseudo electric cars, the batteries.

So the hybrid has some value as an indicator to manufacturers that there is a market for an alternative, and that some people are willing to pay a premium for a car that demonstrates an actual or potential enviromental advantage. It is not however a base from which a future improved car can develop. It is not a stepping stone to completely electric vehicles, nor enviromentally sound electric vehicles, nor is it a stepping stone to hydrogen powered vehicles.

Thus it is my OPINION (note the caps) that the prius and similar cars are of limited value in this regard. I am as always prepared to believe I'm wrong.

edit: Incidentally there are some wonderful all electric vehicles right now, have a look online. The issue right now as I type is the cost of LI batteries. With those the performance/range issues are largely addressed along with the total pollution load issues to some extent. LI are THE big breakthrough in hi efficiency and low pollution vehicles. If they become more affordable and don't produce an excessive pollution load in production then we may finally see the all electric car become common place.

2c

mic-d
8th April 2009, 02:46 PM
mic-d:

gas: Physics. a substance possessing perfect molecular mobility and the property of indefinite expansion, as opposed to a solid or liquid.

So when does a suspended areosol become a true gas ?

When water evaporates it undergoes a phase change, where it goes from a liquid to a gas, water vapour by definition is a gas. A suspended aerosol is fine condensed (liquid)water suspended in gas, it is not water vapour, for example cloud or fog. It's basic first year science, perhaps even high school science these days, which I have lectured to many students about. An aerosol will never become a true gas because by definition it is suspended liquid (perhaps solids) in gas.
Would you like me to find a friendly PhD to support this?... Oh wait, that would be ...

Me.:)

Cheers
Michael

BobL
8th April 2009, 05:02 PM
So when does a suspended areosol become a true gas ? because the CCE's just love to ignore water vapour and clouds in their figures.

When a material starts to approximate P V = n R T it's a gas, whereas aerosols won't do that.

BobL
8th April 2009, 05:41 PM
I don't have time, and probably lack the inclination anyway, to either find the info for you or do a proper analysis. I am sure a search engine will lead you to the many good sites questioning climate change evangelism.

And we all know that everything on the web is true . . . . right.

There are so many 5 minute experts out there that read a couple of websites that suit their pre-existing viewpoint and think they can make an informed opinion about climate change. This stuff is incredibly complicated - no one person can every hope to get across the topic - anyone that says they can is sprouting bovine aerosol. Unlike most scientific research, which is relatively clearly defined and clear cut, and one piece of evidence can bring a theory undone, climate change does not fit into that mold. There are a zillion parameters and the computer models and the research are done in big teams. No single expert has the total skill and knowledge base of any of the teams, so only expert teams can comment on the validity of their and related results. This is a new way of doing science and we'd better get used to it as that's how more and more problems will have to be tackled. If the climate change opponents can garner the same level of expertise as an existing team (not retired disgruntled flunkies and TV weathermen as was done recently by a US senator) and develop and analyse models in depth with the same degree of attention to detail as the teams do then I will take notice of them. The modeling guys are always looking for ways to flunk the other teams models but everything seems to be pointing the same way. The guys and gals in our lab that do ice core work take around 10 years to learn to do what they do, and when some idiot comes along and attacks their work after reading a half baked article by a so called expert - I see them smile and sigh and shake their head.