Brilliant news VAG and Renault intend to phase out diesel engines in small to mid sized cars because cleaning up the emmissions sufficiently to meet requirements is not viable.
They'll get around it. Diesel engines lack the century of development and refinement of petrol engines, but the real world driveability and economy of them cannot be denied.
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Originally posted by nick205
They'll get around it. Diesel engines lack the century of development and refinement of petrol engines, but the real world driveability and economy of them cannot be denied.
Based on current technology not so great for those who do a reasonable mileage each year and make use of a larger car. Petrols are catching up, but
slowly. VAG/Skoda's recent 1.0 petrol with 115bhp sounds very promising. All that said it'll probably be 15-20 years before decent diesels
are no longer available second hand. I'd like to go petrol, and would be looking at about the current spec of Superb in 3yrs time. I strongly
suspect I will be on a diesel again but smaller - probably 1.6.
Two cars from now hopefully petrols are comparatively affordable (or I work closer to home ;-) ) because some aspects of the diesels (such as the
tendency to gunge up their inlets) if driven gently are not helpful!
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Originally posted by WesBrooks
I strongly suspect I will be on a diesel again but smaller - probably 1.6.
Two cars from now hopefully petrols are comparatively affordable (or I work closer to home ;-) ) because some aspects of the diesels (such as the tendency to gunge up their inlets) if driven gently are not helpful!
I've had VAG 1.9 and 2.0 TDIs (currently have a Touran 1.9 TDI) - all very capable cars with plenty of "real world" grunt when
required. MPG is good and I find them cheap to service (myself) and run.
I also had a Volvo V50 "Drive" 1.6D. The V50 itself is IMHO one of the best looking small estates around, but to live with was awful IMHO.
The internal design looked OK on the face of it, but Volvo had made IMHO a pigs ear of the space available. It's saving grace with the 1.6D was
very good MPG of 65+ on a motorway run.
I have a 2.0 TDI A4 and dont mind the engine. The stop start and cruddy commute I have still returns 50mpg (on the trip so not fictional) which is
witchcraft in my eyes.
So what equivical car would you guys recommend I get next. I like VAG cars and Audi in particular. I am happy to go petrol. I am considering an S5 or
S4 next as I am going to be using a bike soon to commute.
I had the EGR valve replaced 3 times on my old Passat 1.9 Tdi, in the end I had it removed and mapped out. Luckily the car was pre dpf as a number of
friends have had no end of trouble with them.
I'm fed up of diesels at the moment, they are just so bland to drive. I have swapped the Passat for a mk2 Octavia Vrs Estate and the wife has a
Mini cooper 1.6 petrol too. They cost far less to buy than the diesel equivalent, had lower miles than a diesel equivalent and were better specced
too. They might cost a bit more to run day to day but its going to be a good few tanks of fuel before that overtakes the difference in initial outlay.
I've just done a long drive in a 1.2 skoda superb and tbh the performance was really good even overtaking despite it being a fair sized car, averaged 55mpg on petrol on windy Scottish west coast roads which is more than my 2.0 tdi cmax managed. It was no contest that tiny petrol was vastly better in all respects.
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I think I'll stick with my NA petrol
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Originally posted by nick205
They'll get around it. Diesel engines lack the century of development and refinement of petrol engines, but the real world driveability and economy of them cannot be denied.
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Originally posted by SJ
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I think I'll stick with my NA petrol
For short runs you can't beat them. Our old Toyota has done abot 2k a year all its life [18 years old] and has never had a problem.
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Originally posted by Mr Whippy
...which is more than my 2.0 tdi cmax managed...
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Originally posted by britishtrident
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Originally posted by nick205
They'll get around it. Diesel engines lack the century of development and refinement of petrol engines, but the real world driveability and economy of them cannot be denied.
Not true a lot of development was ploughed into high speed diesels over the last 100 years Junkers developed diesel aircraft engines in the 1930s, post war in the UK Napier, Rootes and Rolls-Royce all did a lot of diesel development.
The compression ignition cycle has advantages over the spark ignition Otto cycle but fuel oil burns more slowly than spirit or gaseous fuels and that is a fact there is no escaping. The petrol engine is changing again within 5 years Turbo GDI lean burn will be universal
[Edited on 8/9/16 by britishtrident]
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Originally posted by nick205
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
quote:
Originally posted by nick205
They'll get around it. Diesel engines lack the century of development and refinement of petrol engines, but the real world driveability and economy of them cannot be denied.
Not true a lot of development was ploughed into high speed diesels over the last 100 years Junkers developed diesel aircraft engines in the 1930s, post war in the UK Napier, Rootes and Rolls-Royce all did a lot of diesel development.
The compression ignition cycle has advantages over the spark ignition Otto cycle but fuel oil burns more slowly than spirit or gaseous fuels and that is a fact there is no escaping. The petrol engine is changing again within 5 years Turbo GDI lean burn will be universal
[Edited on 8/9/16 by britishtrident]
Interesting - I wasn't aware that large organisations had put in much effort. My point was the fact that petrol FI engines have been CR for quite a while whereas diesel engines only recently. It does make me think that if car makers put in a little more effort then diesel could be bought forwards inline with petrol. It may still be more polluting by default, but I'd imagine some development could overcome that too.
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Originally posted by nick205
It does make me think that if car makers put in a little more effort then diesel could be bought forwards inline with petrol. It may still be more polluting by default, but I'd imagine some development could overcome that too.
Only a matter of time before VED on diesel vehicle starts to rise.
My Mazda6 2L Diesel was a fine car, but it looked like it was about to go expensively wrong so I thought I'd change it. I'm mid 40's and thought it was time I had a Jag. My wife said "Don't get another diesel, they pollute too much" Oh well, if I limit myself to petrol, I'll just have to have a 5 litre V8 MPG on my commute is between 18 and 22 but I don't care!
Many OEM's are considering this route as the RDE emissions will make using diesel and gasoline only engines virtually impossible to pass. (at
least for realistic development costs). Gasolinel engines will be replaced by 2021 with hybrid and diesel will be replaced with electric/hydrogen
NOx is a problem for direct injection engines both gasoline and diesel
I'm still trying to work out how my 02 plate 2.0 petrol Volvo managed to get 0% Co2 readings on it last MOT bit weird to me..
quote:simpler to put higher tax on the fuel.
Only a matter of time before VED on diesel vehicle starts to rise.
I'd be surprised if we don't see the end of IC engines within 10 years. Battery technology is advancing rapidly.
Batteries may work for short to medium commute however what about lorries, ships and planes?
They may try and chase us out of cars with excessive tax, the fuel that powers them will be around for a long time yet thankfully.
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Originally posted by Mr Whippy
I'm still trying to work out how my 02 plate 2.0 petrol Volvo managed to get 0% Co2 readings on it last MOT bit weird to me..
Mine's a Superb 170 2.0 td-cr. Had 100,000 on the clock when I bought it in 2012 and will have 220000 by the end of next week. Always recorded
tank to tank mileage and have a lifetime economy of about 48mpg. Had one 700 mile tank, the max it's ever taken in a fill is 56l. Had a few 55mpg
tanks. Swapping to a 1.6 would save about 500 a year. I've had a fair bit of work done on it but that's not bad considering I'm doing
more than 2.5 time national average.
Extender light throttle at 50mph (m60, average speed cam) appearred to block the car up. Had a breakdown that left no fault codes twice, but has
cleared up after changing driving style to less mpg hunter to moderate acceleration and sitting on the motorway limits.
I'd love electric but don't think the overall lifetime cost, durability, or range are close yet. Petrol is close. Heard about research on
dieseling petrol, laser ignition, and throttleless designg which may all help.
Ironically I've a feeling the strict regulation of the emissions actually results in some of the more game changing technologies being delaid.
You can see the R&D teams saying right we're so many % better than euro x, hold that technology for next time.
I thought a I read this week that there is talk of a posbbile scrappage scheme for 'old' diesels. Recenly I have noticed more and more 2008 vintage diesels chucking out some terrible soot and who knows what other invisible toxins. So maybe not a bad idea. I guess this is the back end of the life of the surge of diesels that were sold as diesel became popular around a decade ago. Full disclosure: I've a '57 plate Volvo D5.
I wouldn't rule out electric planes in the future looking at the rate batteries have been improving.
Electric lorries maybe even closer, in that they already exist and Siemens are trying to have some overhead cables fitted in Germany to run electric
Lorries (I don't know if they're hybrids or if they charge up a battery to work off the system).
Anything could happen in the future, and the technologies that succeed aren't always the ones that are empirically best. I've seen a lot
though from many sources (AA, IET, General news) to suggest European governments are gearing up to reduce diesel use and I think if diesel fuel
suddenly cost a lot more and congestion charges and bans from certain areas are introduced, they will disappear fairly quickly.