If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers...
Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers when gas prices creep up to $3 a
gallon....tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa! Sorry....blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa! |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Those of us who own real utility vehicles own them for their safety and
ability to move large things, including more people than you can stuff into a Geo Metro. We don't really care what kind of mileage they get. If we did, we wouldn't own them. Given that the average Suburban will last 2 or 3 times as long as a subcompact, and cost substantially less to maintain and repair over its life, the cost is just about even per mile, even at $3/gal. A few examples: 100,000 miles on a set of brakes, then just replace the pads. Try that with a Cavalier. $30 for a water pump and 45 minutes to install it. Or, $900 on a Cavalier 80,000 miles on a set of tires. 20 minutes to change 8 spark plugs. Several hours and much lost blood on the average minivan to change 6. 250,000 mile engine life if the oil is changed religiously. Yeah, I know there's someone out there with 300,000 miles on their Honda, but MOST of them don't last that long. Pretty much ALL truck engines last much longer than little car engines. Given the amount energy consumed of pollution produced in the PRODUCTION of a new vehicle, the SUVs don't actually pollute much more than compacts because they last twice as long. I will personally continue to drive my 12-year-old Suburban, even at over $3 a gallon, with a smile on my face, which you won't be able to see because your rear-view mirror shows only my bumper. Oh, and before you start the middle-east oil dependency lecture, my 2002 Tahoe burns E-85 (thats 85% Ethanol), so it runs on American corn and only burns gasoline at the equivalent of 126 MPG. Hope you don't get crushed by a real vehicle. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 23:08:32 -0500, "Essb" <Billy Lincoln> wrote:
>Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers when gas prices creep up to $3 a >gallon....tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa! >Sorry....blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa! > > > 'Up' to $3? That would be less than half what we pay here in the UK, while still grinning in our SUVs! -- R o o n e y |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Well that is like ****ing in a fan.
-- HarryS My 2¢ "Essb" <Billy Lincoln> wrote in message ... | Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers when gas prices creep up to $3 a | gallon....tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa! | Sorry....blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa! | | | | |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Never heard that one before HarryS ... "like ****ing into a fan" ... good
one! What's with these bozo's that don't see the big picture? Oh yeah ... I remember ... the word is troll. "HarryS" > wrote in message ... > Well that is like ****ing in a fan. > > -- > HarryS My 2¢ > "Essb" <Billy Lincoln> wrote in message > ... > | Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers when gas prices creep up to $3 > a > | gallon....tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa! > | Sorry....blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa! > | > | > | > | > > |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa... I can't
wait to hit you with my SUV's (2) 1 heaver than the other (4800lbs,5200lbs) and watch you, maybe I say maybe crawling from the wreckage..tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa. "Essb" <Billy Lincoln> wrote in message ... > Cant wait to see faces of SUV drivers when gas prices creep up to $3 > a > gallon....tee hee hheeeee heeee haaaa haaaaaa! > Sorry....blllrrrpp...heee hee haaa! > > > > |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
In reply to the how many gallons of diesel fuel it takes to produce a gallon
of ethanol. I am not sure how many gallons they can get from a bushel of corn, but on my farm, I raise about 195 bushel average per acre and burn 4 gallons of diesel per acre to get it. I am sure they get several gallons per bushel, so when you look at it there is no comparison. 4 gallons diesel = several hundred ethanol. "aarcuda69062" > wrote in message ... > In article >, > wrote: > >> Oh, and before you start the middle-east oil dependency lecture, my 2002 >> Tahoe burns E-85 (thats 85% Ethanol), so it runs on American corn and >> only >> burns gasoline at the equivalent of 126 MPG. > > How many gallons of Diesel fuel did it take to produce that > gallon of corn liquor? > > How many politicians did Archer Daniels Midland bribe to get the > ethanol subsidies needed to make he cost of that corn liquor > competitive? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Actually the technical term is "troll". <g> But I do like yours!
On Sun, 20 Mar 2005 05:31:24 -0500, "HarryS" > wrote: >Well that is like ****ing in a fan. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
In article >,
"The Adams Family" > wrote: > In reply to the how many gallons of diesel fuel it takes to produce a gallon > of ethanol. I am not sure how many gallons they can get from a bushel of > corn, but on my farm, I raise about 195 bushel average per acre and burn 4 > gallons of diesel per acre to get it. I am sure they get several gallons per > bushel, so when you look at it there is no comparison. 4 gallons diesel = > several hundred ethanol. You're right, there is no comparison. From the Oregon department of Energy: The cost of producing ethanol varies with the cost of the feedstock used and the scale of production. Approximately 85 percent of ethanol production capacity in the United States relies on corn feedstock. The cost of producing ethanol from corn is estimated to be about $1.10 per gallon. Although there is currently no commercial production of ethanol from cellulosic feedstocks such as agricultural wastes, grasses and wood, the estimated production cost using these feedstocks is $1.15 to $1.43 per gallon. Because a gallon of ethanol contains less energy than a gallon of gasoline, the production cost of ethanol must be multiplied by a factor of 1.5 to make an energy-cost comparison with gasoline. This means that if ethanol costs $1.10 per gallon to produce, then the effective cost per gallon to equal the energy contained in a gallon of gasoline is $1.65. In contrast, the current wholesale price of gasoline is about 90 cents per gallon. The federal motor fuel excise tax on gasohol, a blended fuel of 10-percent ethanol and 90-percent gasoline, is 5.4 cents less per gallon than the tax on straight gasoline. In other words, the federal subsidy is 54 cents per gallon of ethanol when the ethanol is blended with gasoline. The subsidy makes ethanol-blended fuel competitive in the marketplace and stimulates the growth of an ethanol production and distribution infrastructure. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Flashpoint Racing Series begins tonight! | [email protected] | Simulators | 34 | February 18th 05 01:37 AM |
cooling site | tim | VW air cooled | 13 | January 27th 05 04:33 AM |
Wed Night N2003 league looking for drivers | [email protected] | Simulators | 0 | November 30th 04 02:46 AM |
Truck Drivers Needed | Trucking Recruiter | 4x4 | 0 | April 14th 04 01:33 PM |