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Home > General > Demise of diesel has started already? |
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Dresdner Member Since: 29 Feb 2016 Location: Dresden Posts: 244 |
Did not saw the figures of car sales in Germany but no one is buying diesel cars any more and as a result the used diesel car market went down amid the upcoming diesel ban from city centers in Germany.
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5th Aug 2017 7:55 am |
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LR NUT Member Since: 12 May 2012 Location: Scotland Posts: 4350 |
Not the first time Germans have lost their minds MY14 Kahn Converted Dynamic - Fuji White Ebony/Pimento Interior
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5th Aug 2017 7:58 am |
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j77 Member Since: 26 Nov 2008 Location: Fife Posts: 2909 |
I'll be sticking with diesel until I'm pushed.
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5th Aug 2017 9:48 am |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
It's time the market was rebalanced in my view. Diesel is simply a poor option for someone doing a lot of short trips in town, particularly with the oil dilution problems beginning to surface in the new engines. The diesel engine is hopelessly inefficient until it warms up. So it makes sense for small car buying city dwellers to go back to petrol, or even better, electric. But diesel is a far better choice for high mileage long journey use, and people will realise this some time. What you really need is a hybrid that can be switched to electric for use in town, although you'd also need drivers with intelligence to use them properly in that way, so maybe it won't happen. Ex AA Series III LWB Safari - Gone
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5th Aug 2017 7:55 pm |
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Dan_NL Member Since: 30 Jul 2016 Location: Dutch Highlands Posts: 98 |
I've been told by LR dealer that hybrid won't come. They are supposed to go to hydrogen as range is important and electricity supply is the next problem if everybody goes electric. I suggested hybrid with 10km full electric and plugin option. As it is I plugin now to electricly preheat my D3 in winter to protect it from wear on shorter trips. In the mean time I bought a FL2 which is my long distance summer car when I park the D3 in Portugal for the family. In winter we use a MiTo petrol for any distance...
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5th Aug 2017 8:48 pm |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
I'm not sure that this is the end of the world. There will always be a number of people who will be easily influenced by the latest, newspaper selling, scare story in the media and a lot of people were buying diesels that didn't need them anyway. This should only be a "correction" in the number of diesels sold. As a high mileage, medium to long journey, almost always out of town, driver this won't change a thing for me. One day, my car will be alternative fuel powered, but we're not there yet. The only way that this will cause a rout in diesel values is if the newspaper editors see additional sales to be made out of printing stories about it and people choose to accept it and repeat it without challenging it! |
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6th Aug 2017 3:38 am |
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Stuartc Member Since: 01 Dec 2014 Location: Perth, Australia Posts: 2292 |
D5 Released in Australia......diesel only range, no petrol varients! MY15
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6th Aug 2017 5:13 am |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
Electric Jags are being tested - saw one at Eastnor. Would the hire problem be eased if you were able to get commercial rates rather than tourist? If you're hiring for a longish period that might be worth investigating. Ex AA Series III LWB Safari - Gone 300TDi Disco (bought new - terrible car) sent back after 18 months Freelander 1 Estate - leased, given back at end of lease 200TDi Disco (bought from a mate with 100,000 on the clock) - Gone Disco 2 TD5 - sold and exported to France FR2 TD4 GS - Gone FR2 SD4 HSE - Now changed for a DS New model ex-demo Evoque S 180 in white Unable to order a new DS, so gave up. Now have a Volvo S90 Recharge. |
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6th Aug 2017 7:32 am |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
And how do you make hydrogen ? By electrolysis and that means electricity, it might mean that you don't have to charge each individual car but at the end of the day you still have to produce it. Remember thermodynamics and that you can't get something for nothing. 3 x FL1 2 manual + 1 auto
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6th Aug 2017 8:50 am |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
I suppose an advantage is that you can make the hydrogen when you have spare grid capacity. indeed sunny places like Saudi could use solar power to make it and then ship it, replacing their oil revenues. If you think about it, hydrogen is just another (rather explosive) way of storing electricity.
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6th Aug 2017 9:11 am |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1687 |
Until battery packs are standardised and on a quick release tray there is no future in pure electric for long distance travel in the foreseeable future by charging, the practical way would be pull in swap packs and away, the packs are recharged, that would mean many packs circulating and the manufacturing costs may reduce but not pollution to make them and charge them unless solar energy could be used, ( judging by recent summers perhaps economic solar charging is down to about 60 to a hundred days/year).
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6th Aug 2017 9:37 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 4999 |
My daughter now lives in rural Victoria and she says people there are moving to diesel as petrol prices have gone up quite a bit. I cant see electric cars having much impact in Oz for some time as range is so important. A 3 hr drive to see a medical specialist in Melbourne and back the same day is not unusual. Jules |
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6th Aug 2017 2:21 pm |
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Dan_NL Member Since: 30 Jul 2016 Location: Dutch Highlands Posts: 98 |
@ Past master.
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6th Aug 2017 7:31 pm |
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Past master Member Since: 30 Jun 2010 Location: Isle of Ely Posts: 2710 |
!
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6th Aug 2017 7:37 pm |
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