Some points:
True.
So what does the alternator do? A modern gasoline car does not cause radio static or interfere with pacemakers unless you stick your pacemaker right between the ignition wires.
In fact, the recommended safe distance for a pacemaker from a gasoline engine is a minimum of 12". Not a problem unless you're a dealership mechanic.
True, to a point, depending on the diesel engine in question. Veggie oil rocks.
Fuel economy runs usually encompass long highway runs. Sitting still in traffic, a hybrid using 0 liters of fuel an hour to run the airconditioner is more efficient than a diesel using 1 liter of fuel an hour to do the same... well... until you drain the hybrid's batteries... we spent an hour sitting in traffic waiting to see how long it takes the aircon to drain the Prius's battery packs...
LPG pa rin... CNG sucks. :hysterical:
And it turns at just a few hundred rpm an hour. automotive engines need to be more flexible...
Now this is the one reason I'm replying... that's absolute bull. A gasoline pick-up can do all of these, as well, and still be reliable... and modifying a gasoline pickup for truck drags does not produce clouds of billowing black smoke.
no doubt, petrol does, but the focal point here is FC & torque, say compare 6.4L diesel vs Petrol as workhorse?
True.
True.
Doubly True.
Actually, electrics produce maximum torque at 0 rpms... making them perfect for towing... well... if anyone can solve the battery problem, that is. But the huge torque of modern diesels is not due to the diesel per se... but due to the fact that they are turbocharged.
It is easier to turbocharge a diesel engine.
It is easier to supercharge a diesel engine.
Tell that to a million blown diesel pumps... diesel injectors that are finicky to calibrate and sensitive to fuel... and modern direct injection injectors that cost an arm and a leg to replace. (and vehicles need these modern direct injection systems to meet new emissions standards, which gasoline engines can meet using low pressure injectors that last over twice as long)
The strength of a diesel is in the overbuilt bottom-end... they have to be built ultra-tough to withstand the high compression forces generated. But this also makes them more expensive to produce. A gasoline engine built to the same specifications and parts strengths will last longer due to the lower compression ratio required for gasoline. And the maintenance requirements of the spark and fuel system of the gasoline engine balances out, in the end, with the maintenance requirements of the diesel system... as long as the diesel is not CRDi, in which case, the maintenance requirements of the CRDi will always cost more.
I guess we should go back to breathing coal dust, then?
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I am a firm believer in diesel power, but let's "kee
p it real"
