jim_wilson
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2004
- Messages
- 1,791
- Location
- Northeast MA
- Tractor
- Kubota B3200 w/ BH77 & 12", 18" & 24" buckets, Kubota B50 SSQA w/ 54" & 60" buckets, LandPride FDR1660, Artillian Fork frame, Extreme 3pt rake, Concrete Mixer, MyTractorTools grapple adapter
When I say "illogical vehicle choice" I should probably elaborate. What I mean by that is that I believe it is that it is unneccessary for suburban soccer moms with one kid to be toting said mom's butt and said child around town in vehicles like Suburbans and Excursions, when a Honda Civic or Toyota Prius would do just as well.
The low price of gas is the thing that allows people to make these vehicle choices. If gas was $5.00 a gallon then a great many people would be driving smaller cars than they currently do now.
When I was younger I did a little bit of car racing and learned a few things. Racing is all about efficiency - efficiency of vehicle design, efficiency of fuel usage, efficiency of the drivers endurance. How many times have you seen a driver at the Indy 500 or a Nascar race out into the lead in the first laps still there when the race ends? How many marathon runners sprint into the lead right from the start and win the race? What we have now is a large vehicle population that is very inefficient when it comes down to the actual tasks that vehicle population has to accomplish. 20 years ago everybody drove smaller cars and everybody got along just fine. Families have gotten smaller for the most part but the vehicles have gotten bigger. For what reason? - to haul around our bigger butts because the population is overweight?
As a general rule when resources are tight and you actually have to pay for them people tend to conserve. If something costs nothing you treat it like that. This is borne out by recent events as more and more people are talking about getting into more efficient vehicles. If it makes sense now how come it didn't make sense before? I don't think that the true cost of gasoline is reflected at the pump - if you added in the tax dollars spent to keep the Navy protecting the oceans the supertankers sail on, the Army in the countries in the Middle East that produce the crude and all of the other myriad ways our tax dollars support the oil economy - you would see higher prices than we have even now. In the end if I am driving a fuel efficient vehicle and everybody else is driving Hummers I am supporting them because their vehicles are subsidized by all of the things I mentioned above.
I believe that nothing in life is free - if you pee in the river somebody else downstream drinks the water. If we use up all the available petroleum then my kids are going to have harder choices to make than my generation was willing to make. Every time I hear somebody say their SUV is safer in an accident I ask them why they keep hitting things. Maybe if their vehicle was smaller they wouldn't have such a hard time navigating around obstacles. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
The low price of gas is the thing that allows people to make these vehicle choices. If gas was $5.00 a gallon then a great many people would be driving smaller cars than they currently do now.
When I was younger I did a little bit of car racing and learned a few things. Racing is all about efficiency - efficiency of vehicle design, efficiency of fuel usage, efficiency of the drivers endurance. How many times have you seen a driver at the Indy 500 or a Nascar race out into the lead in the first laps still there when the race ends? How many marathon runners sprint into the lead right from the start and win the race? What we have now is a large vehicle population that is very inefficient when it comes down to the actual tasks that vehicle population has to accomplish. 20 years ago everybody drove smaller cars and everybody got along just fine. Families have gotten smaller for the most part but the vehicles have gotten bigger. For what reason? - to haul around our bigger butts because the population is overweight?
As a general rule when resources are tight and you actually have to pay for them people tend to conserve. If something costs nothing you treat it like that. This is borne out by recent events as more and more people are talking about getting into more efficient vehicles. If it makes sense now how come it didn't make sense before? I don't think that the true cost of gasoline is reflected at the pump - if you added in the tax dollars spent to keep the Navy protecting the oceans the supertankers sail on, the Army in the countries in the Middle East that produce the crude and all of the other myriad ways our tax dollars support the oil economy - you would see higher prices than we have even now. In the end if I am driving a fuel efficient vehicle and everybody else is driving Hummers I am supporting them because their vehicles are subsidized by all of the things I mentioned above.
I believe that nothing in life is free - if you pee in the river somebody else downstream drinks the water. If we use up all the available petroleum then my kids are going to have harder choices to make than my generation was willing to make. Every time I hear somebody say their SUV is safer in an accident I ask them why they keep hitting things. Maybe if their vehicle was smaller they wouldn't have such a hard time navigating around obstacles. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif