Frisco has a great pro-active initiative. I wouldn't be surpised if someone in our local government was actually thinking... ahead.Originally Posted by ccage
The other night I was driving past the new soccer stadium -- after their first game which I missed 'cause I was stupid and forgot to pick up tickets -- and noticed two Priuses (Prii? :)) in white with Frisco city logos on them parked in the median. I wonder if the state funded them or if they just picked 'em up on their own initiative?Originally Posted by Autoblog
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Frisco has a great pro-active initiative. I wouldn't be surpised if someone in our local government was actually thinking... ahead.Originally Posted by ccage
Tarrant County has a fleet of Civic Hybrids.
Depends on what your idea of looking ahead is. From a cost/benefit POV, a Civic Sedan or similar econocar still makes a lot more economic sense than a Prius, even at $2.50 a gallon for regular unleaded, unless the city plans on keeping those Priuses for over a quarter of a million miles.Originally Posted by Treibenschnell
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Iain
"We don't stop playing because we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
Yep... my Dad was looking at the Prius for a commuter car and really wanted to get one, but couldn't make the cost/benefit math work. He ended up with a Mazda3i.Originally Posted by altiain
Hybrids came up in a discussion I had the other day regarding "good" reasons to lease a car. A friend was bashing leasing, and I listed hybrids as something that I couldn't see buying at this point. (I'm not sure I'd own one at all, but if I did I'd lease instead of buy.)
What happens when those non-standard components wear out? I think no one really knows yet what the long-term value of these vehicles will be, and I suspect no one is yet certain what's going to happen to the batteries in some of 'em.
There was an interesting article in Autoblog -- I know, I seem to be the Autoblog cheerleader today -- talking about how even though a lot of people are saying that the big three are missing out by not overly committing to hybrid technology, Chrysler's recent "comeback" led by the Hemi seems to indicate that maybe "green" isn't the only thing the public's thinking about...
And, of course, GM's making the big bet on hydrogen power. Hmm...
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Last edited by ccage; 08-08-2005 at 12:40 PM.
They'd better!Originally Posted by altiain
Forget hybrids. I wish we'd get clean diesel fuel and all those amazing diesels they sell over in Europe.
S.
Your wish, etc.Originally Posted by srivendel
Originally Posted by Autoblog