Electronics Industry Search

Polling Question

Green design is a priority for me in 2009.

  • Yes
  • No



View previous polls
Advertisement
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by

In praise of hybrids

By Paul E. Teague, National Editor -- Design News, August 5, 2002

I have a confession: Un-macho as it may seem, 0-to-60 ratings on new cars really don't impress me that much. I can fantasize with the best of humankind, imagining myself screaming around a race track or beating everybody and their brother when the red light turns green. Truth is, I don't really drive that fast.

Cars with 0-to-60 ratings in the sub-six-second range are wasted on me.

On the other hand, I am impressed with automotive-engineering efforts that save fuel and don't crud up the air. That's among the reasons I wanted to test drive the 2003 Honda Civic Hybrid.

It doesn't pretend to be a fast car, though it was generally peppy enough for me. It does lay claim to impressive fuel-economy numbers: 46 in the city, 51 on the open road. And, it's got some neat technology inside that helps the car achieve those numbers. A 60-mm-wide permanent-magnet motor (13.4 hp @ 4,000 rpm), powered by a Nickel-Metal Hydride battery, supplements the in-line, four-cylinder gasoline engine for extra oomph in acceleration or climbing hills. The gas engine recharges the batteries while you're driving.

Best of all is the idle-stop feature. Stop at a red light or in heavy traffic, put the manual transmission in neutral, and the engine shuts down. Shift into first and the engine restarts immediately.

Honda debuted much of the technology in its three-cylinder Insight. But, with its 155-inch/67-inch/1,875-lb (length/width/weight) profile, that car is too small for me. The Civic Hybrid measures a foot-and-a-half longer and weighs an additional 800-plus pounds, more in line with the Toyota Prius, which I haven't driven (but I plan to!). It felt substantial to me.

Will its power impress the cowboys who race their engines at red lights? Nah. They'll leave this car in the dust. But, those drivers will probably wind up in accidents eventually anyway.

For those who brag about how fast they can go, let them get out of their cars and run. Foot speed is infinitely more macho than horsepower under the hood.

pteague@reedbusiness.com

Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by
Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com

Talkback


We would love your feedback!


» Submit talk back
Advertisement

DN's Resource Center Get Free Information, Made Easy

Advertisement

Design News Partner Zones

AnarkCAD/CAE Model Clean-Up: Reduce Iterative Cycles
This webinar featured research and survey results related to problems associated with preparing CAD geometry for CAE applications.  We discussed how Recipe-Based Automation can help create "just-in-time" CAE-ready geometry each time a cad model is updated. Watch the Presentation


Light Matters: A High-Performance, "No-Compromise" Solid State Lamp?
First, let's define "no-compromise". In an ideal configuration, this lamp would use a high-brightness LED (HBLED) that is built into a small, integrated package, and is able to produce a large quantity of focused light, operate with a high level of reliability and generate no audible noise. Is this difficult? Yes, but it is possible.
Read More


Design Engineers' Portal for Sensing and Machine Safety
Whatever industry you're in, or whatever product you manufacture, the right sensors to automate your plant, and to improve your overall efficiency, quality and safety are a must. You'll find Banner Engineering to be an amazing resource of products, training and people with expertise.

Design News Partner Zone Directory »

Please visit these other Reed Business sites