Hybrid Cars: What’s All The Fuss About?

Consumers are flocking towardshybrid cars. What is it that makes hybrids that makes them so plain buyable?

To begin with, if you’re fortunate enough to be a hybrid owner, you’ll see a significant savings on fuel. The price of gasoline isprobably never going to dip below $2 a gallon again. When you compare a hybrid car to a gas guzzler’s fuel economy, hybrid cars will enable you to cut fuel consumption in half. This means fewer trips to the gasoline station.

The government is also taking steps to promote the hybrid technology. In 2005, During the Bush Administration, the President signed a bill that offered great tax incentives to any consumer that purchased a hybrid.

There’s free parking and tolls too!  

You can feel better about owning a hybrid too. Through the use of two engines, one electric and one combustion, hybrid automobiles pollute less.  

By combining the two sources of power, gasoline and electric, a hybrid carcan reach higher speeds with less effort, it also guzzles less gas in gridlock traffic.  The hybrid fuel cell vehicle was invented as a direct result of the demand that the automobile industry create cars less reliant on foreign oil and less polluting for the planet. Don’t forget that it’s not necessary to charge the hybrid vehicle through an electrical outlet.  They actually charge themselves via the gasoline engine and other creative workarounds.

Hybrid cars also offer a great return on investment.  Hybrid vehicles by nature also car can retain a higher resale value. If you ever want to trade or sell a previously owned hybrid car, you be sure that you will get more of what you paid for it.  One complaint among potential hybrid buyers is the often prohibitive price versus the lower cost of similar-sized combustion engine cars. However, the hybrid car still wins out in that it saves its owners money over the life of the car in gas costs.

Bottom line, if you need a cleaner, quieter and more fuel efficient car, put a hybrid car on your list.

Has anyone used one of the kits or manuals to convert their car to a water/fuel vehicle?

teacher93514 asked:


I have visited many sites that claim a simple hydrogen conversion unit will give you 45% – 65% increase in fuel efficiency, but none appear to have any feedback from actual users. I’d like to hear from someone who has actually used this technology on a regular gas burning car and knows how easy or difficult the conversion was to install and if the gas savings are realistic.
As for the chemistry being all wrong, I think not. I’ve seen the newsreel footage of the Japanese car that runs completely on water alone, using a hydrogen conversion engine. I know the water-fueled engine works. I just want to know if my old car can take advantage of this technology or if I have to wait and buy a new car when the Japanese car goes into production.

As for American car makers jumping on the new technology–Are you kidding me? Detroit is in bed with Big Oil, or haven’t you noticed? The VW bug came to American when I was still too young to drive, but Detroit didn’t bother to make anything to rival it until over 20 years later, and that was not due to their altruism but due to former gas-guzzler customers buying German and Japanese and Italian economy cars. I have no problem with not buying American if American car manufacturers have no problem gouging me for a pollution-mobile.

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