Click Here to Get Featured on Alex Leigh Dot Net!

Real Estate Top Blogs
English flagItalian flag
Korean flagChinese (Simplified) flag
Portuguese flagGerman flag
French flagSpanish flag
Japanese flagArabic flag
Russian flagGreek flag
Dutch flagBulgarian flag
Danish flagFinnish flag
Hindi flagPolish flag
Swedish flagNorwegian flag


Toyota Prius: Hip or Hype?

October 29th, 2008 -- by Alex Leigh




Earlier in the month, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released its list of the ten most fuel-efficient vehicles for model year 2009, in addition to the list of the least fuel-efficient vehicles. And of course, no suprise, the Toyota Prius took the top spot in the EPA’s list of most fuel-efficient vehicles for 2009.

So, the Prius is awesome right? No suprise there. Well, I hate that car! And not because I am a diehard automobile enthusiast either. It’s also not because it’s a stereotypical white person yuppie car. What I truly can’t stand is that fact that people buy into the hype that they are somehow saving the environment by driving one. It is the ignorance that this car inspires in people that truly infuriates me.

To help prove my point, I am going to reprint a commentary written by the president of the 60 Plus Association, a national nonpartisan senior citizen organization based in Arlington, Va, James L. Martin, called Hidden Cost of Driving a Prius. Totaling all the energy expended, from design to junkyard, a Hummer may be a better bargain.. Enjoy, while I go cool off…

When it comes to protecting the environment, senior citizens should concentrate more on
the total energy consumed in building and operating a car than its fuel efficiency – no
matter how impressive the statistics appear on the window sticker at the showroom.

A prime example is Toyota’s Prius, a compact hybrid that’s beloved by ardent
environmentalists and that fetches premium prices because it gets nearly 50 miles-pergallon
in combined highway/city driving.

Yet, new data have emerged that show the Prius may not be quite as eco-friendly as first
assumed – if you pencil in the environmental negatives of producing it in the first place.

Like most hybrids, the Prius relies on two engines – one, a conventional 76-horsepower
gasoline power plant, and a second, battery-powered, that kicks in 67 more horses. Most
of the gas is consumed as the car goes from 0 to 30, according to alarmed Canadian
environmentalists, who say Toyota’s touting of the car’s green appeal leaves out a few
pertinent and disturbing facts.

The nickel for the battery, for instance, is mined in Sudbury, Ontario, and smelted at
nearby Nickel Centre, just north of the province’s massive Georgian Bay.

Toyota buys about 1,000 tons of nickel from the facility each year, ships the nickel to
Wales for refining, then to China, where it’s manufactured into nickel foam, and then
onto Toyota’s battery plant in Japan.

That alone creates a globe-trotting trail of carbon emissions that ought to seriously
concern everyone involved in the fight against global warming. All told, the start-tofinish
journey travels more than 10,000 miles – mostly by container ship, but also by
diesel locomotive.

But it’s not just the clouds of greenhouse gases generated by all that smelting, refining,
manufacturing and transporting that worries green activists. The 1,250-foot-tall
smokestack that spews huge puffs of sulphur dioxide at the Sudbury mine and smelter
operation has left a large swath of the surrounding area looking like a surrealistic scene
from the depths of hell.

On the perimeter of the area, skeletons of trees and bushes stand like ghostly sentinels
guarding a sprawling wasteland. Astronauts in training for NASA actually have practiced
driving moon buggies on the suburban Sudbury tract because it’s considered a duplicate
of the Moon’s landscape.

“The acid rain around Sudbury was so bad it destroyed all the plants, and the soil slid
down off the hillside,” David Martin, Greenpeace’s energy coordinator in Canada, told
the London Daily Mail.

“The solution they came up with was the Superstack. The idea was to dilute pollution, but
all it did was spread the fallout across northern Ontario,” Martin told the British
newspaper, adding that Sudbury remains “a major environmental and health problem.
The environmental cost of producing that car battery is pretty high.”

A “Dust to Dust” study by CNW Marketing Research of Bandon, Ore., shows the overall
eco-costs of automotive hybrids may be even higher.

Released last December, the study tabulated all data on the energy necessary to plan,
build, sell, drive and dispose of a vehicle from drawing board to junkyard, including such
items as plant-to-dealer fuel costs, distances driven, electricity usage per pound of
material in each vehicle, and hundreds of other variables.

To put the data into understandable terms for consumers, CNW translated it into a
“dollars per lifetime mile” figure, or the energy cost per mile driven. When looked at
from that perspective, the Prius and other hybrids quickly morphed from fuel-sippers into
energy-guzzlers.

The Prius registered an energy-cost average of $3.25 per mile driven over its expected
life span of 100,000 miles. Ironically, a Hummer, the brooding giant that has become the
bête noir of the green movement, did much better, with an energy-cost average of $1.95
over its expected life span of 300,000 miles. And its crash protection makes it far safer
than the tiny Prius.

Such information should be of major concern to senior citizens – especially those on a
fixed budget.

If seniors need a small gas-sipping car for city travel, however, the undisputed champion
is Toyota’s own gasoline-powered subcompact, the Scion xB, whose energy cost
averaged a negligible 48 cents for each mile traveled over its lifetime.

Fully armed with all the facts, seniors may want to zip down to their nearest Toyota
dealer and trade in their Priuses for Scion xBs. That would be the equivalent of reducing
their energy footprint from a size 24D to about a size 5A. In the case of global warming,
one small step for man may turn out to be a giant leap for mankind.

Hah? Well, what do you think now of your underpowered, cheese-wedged, death machine now huh? Still think you are saving the environment now, you snooty, soy latte with skim milk sipping yuppies? Ha!

Drive what you want and can afford people. Or don’t drive at all, and take public transportation. Ride a bike. God forbid, walk! Me? I’m going to continue to drive. But you won’t ever catch me in a Prius!

If you like this post then please consider subscribing to my full feed RSS. You can also subscribe by Email and have new posts sent directly to your inbox.

  • Blogger Post
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Hotmail
  • Share/Bookmark



My Car, Accident

September 29th, 2008 -- by Alex Leigh

What’s going on guys? It’s seven days later and here I am to impart more wisdom. Lol. Today I’d like to talk about purchasing vehicles. As many of you already know, many people use cars as status symbols. Like it or not, rolling up to the valet at a nice restaurant in an Astin Martin gets you very different treatment than if you had driven up in a Honda Civic.

Personally, I love high end cars. I’d take a German, Italian, or British car over a Japanese one any day. So when I was looking to purchase my vehicle the last time, I had already ruled out all Japanese cars. Now, paying for a brand new vehicle off the lot is never a great idea, money-wise. Sure, you are getting to be the first owner, blah, blah, blah.

What I like to do is get the supercars from yester-year. I get the status, the speed, the power, but not the cost! Let me just show you my latest toy first before I go further.

Sorry folks, but this is as far as I got writing this article before I had something come up. What do I mean? Here is a photo below to start you off.

Photobucket

First off, I’d like to apologize for the tardiness of this post. So secondly, I’m sure you all would like to know what happened. Well, the evening started with dinner at Palomino’s, a local bar and restaurant under the Bay Bridge in San Francisco, with a friend. We had a few cocktails with our meal to de-stress and unwind, nothing major. I believe three drinks tops.

Photobucket

As we head home, I take the US101 and transfer to I280. As my friend and I continue our previous conversation in the car, I began to feel more and more stressed out. We were talking about bad business deals, and other personal issues. In a moment of severe bad judgment, that I have not had since I was 18, I let out my frustration on the accelerator.

Photobucket

Now, keep in mind that this was a M Roadster. It has a 3.2 liter inline 6 powerplant with 240 horsepower, capable of launching from zero to sixty in five seconds. Imagine what it did when I mashed it while going 55 mph. The result? Well, you’ve seen the pictures. We shot ahead at a blazing speed, only BMW knows about, until I came to my senses. Unfortunately, we ran over a pothole and was guided into a powerslide.

Photobucket

We drifted from lane number 3 into the center divide wall, without hitting any other vehicles. But it didn’t end there, the impact was so severe that we were bounced back across all four lanes, again without hitting any other vehicles, and into the right side wall of an exit. Miraculously, neither me nor my passenger was hurt. Somebody somewhere was looking out for us.

Photobucket

Special thanks to the Good Samaritan who stopped and called the cops for us. I’m sending you out good Karma. So then the California Highway Patrol showed up and tested our sobriety, which we both passed. Breathilyzer and all. Then the tow truck came and hauled away my baby forever. The lesson this time folks? Don’t be stupid. Think before you do something. Don’t drink and drive. Don’t be distracted and drive. Don’t be sad when you drink. Etc., etc. etc.

If you like this post then please consider subscribing to my full feed RSS. You can also subscribe by Email and have new posts sent directly to your inbox.

  • Blogger Post
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Hotmail
  • Share/Bookmark



Site Sponsors


Featured Sites

Inline Performance Magazine

Xoticus

Lowell Life

Pairody

Lex Racing

Download TradingSolutions

0% Real Estate commissions

Free Credit Consultation!

Make Money Online!

Buy a Featured Site Sponsorship