
Originally Posted by
Captain_Rightfoot
I'm sorry I didn't explain myself very well.
I have a friend who is an electrical engineer who designs ECU's for custom and race cars. He's on all this stuff.
Basically all the new diesels, with all the emissions controls to try and make them cleaner has reduced the gap between diesel and petrol. Petrols have a throttle body so suffer from pumping losses. These are now appearing on diesels too. So you use fuel to create a vacuum at low engine speeds. Very wasteful.
That's not so much of a problem in hybrids as they should never really be operating at idle. Small turbo petrols are also smaller and lighter and can be set up to be very economical.
Modern turbo diesels running addblue etc are proving to be problematic too. I'd avoid them as I don't like big repair bills. Around 2015 seems to be the last of the decent cars before everythign went stupid. I'd avoid most cars build after this time. Actually, recently I found they imported chrysler 300 diesels into australia ..... Hmmm.... I should drive one someday. if its american, its going to be like buying 20 year old technology, so it might actually be reliable as well as fast and economical... not a lithium battery to be found
Proper cars--
'92 Range Rover 3.8V8 ... 5spd manual
'85 Series II CX2500 GTi Turbo I :burnrubber:
'63 ID19 x 2 :wheelchair:
'72 DS21 ie 5spd pallas
Modern Junk:
'07 Poogoe 407 HDi 6spd manual :zzz:
'11 Poogoe RCZ HDI 6spd manual
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