Entries Tagged as 'hybrid'

Prius Rental Cars Sold Out

I’m heading to Riverside today and just booked my rental car with Budget. It is a great sign that the Toyota Prius is sold out. It is a Tuesday and a typical week so I think the cars are likely booked by business travelers like me. This demand will likely drive Budget and the other rental companies to order more hybrid vehicles.

I will book my car earlier next time to get the hybrid.

Budget - Prius sold out

Super Tuesday and Vegetable Oil Fueled Vehicles

With Super Tuesday fast approaching, it would be good to know:

  • Which candidate would do the most to reduce our dependence on petroleum for fuel (domestic or foreign)?
  • Which candidate would do the most to promote alternative energy and conservation?
  • Which would do the most to reduce our production of greenhouse gasses?

I have invited all four remaining candidates (McCain, Romney, Obama and Clinton) to be interviewed here on vegcar.net. What questions would you like to ask them. I’ll let you know when I hear back from them.  :)

The Car Hacker

This is an interesting article about Jonathan Goodwin, a 37-year old “car hacker”, showing Detroit that fuel efficiency and large muscle cars (SUVs) are not mutually exclusive. Personally, I think GM’s Hummer vehicles epitomize the excess and waste at which American automakers excel. They are unsafe, gas-guzzling behemoths that are more about making militarism more family-friendly, than about getting your 9 kids to their baseball game. These vehicles do however, help Mr. Goodwin make his point, and Detroit, it seems, may actually be getting the message.

He [Johnathan Goodwin] aims to use the turbine to turn the Hummer into a tricked-out electric hybrid. Like most hybrids, it’ll have two engines, including an electric motor. But in this case, the second will be the turbine, Goodwin’s secret ingredient. Whenever the truck’s juice runs low, the turbine will roar into action for a few seconds, powering a generator with such gusto that it’ll recharge a set of “supercapacitor” batteries in seconds. This means the H3’s electric motor will be able to perform awesome feats of acceleration and power over and over again, like a Prius on steroids. What’s more, the turbine will burn biodiesel, a renewable fuel with much lower emissions than normal diesel; a hydrogen-injection system will then cut those low emissions in half. And when it’s time to fill the tank, he’ll be able to just pull up to the back of a diner and dump in its excess french-fry grease–as he does with his many other Hummers. Oh, yeah, he adds, the horsepower will double–from 300 to 600.

[...]

This is more than a mere American Chopper–style makeover. Goodwin’s experiments point to a radically cleaner and cheaper future for the American car. The numbers are simple: With a $5,000 bolt-on kit he co-engineered–the poor man’s version of a Goodwin conversion–he can immediately transform any diesel vehicle to burn 50% less fuel and produce 80% fewer emissions. On a full-size gas-guzzler, he figures the kit earns its money back in about a year–or, on a regular car, two–while hitting an emissions target from the outset that’s more stringent than any regulation we’re likely to see in our lifetime. “Johnathan’s in a league of his own,” says Martin Tobias, CEO of Imperium Renewables, the nation’s largest producer of biodiesel. “Nobody out there is doing experiments like he is.”

Nobody–particularly not Detroit. Indeed, Goodwin is doing precisely what the big American automakers have always insisted is impossible. They have long argued that fuel-efficient and alternative-fuel cars are a hard sell because they’re too cramped and meek for our market. They’ve lobbied aggressively against raising fuel-efficiency and emissions standards, insisting that either would doom the domestic industry.

[...]

The Department of Transportation estimated in 2004 that if we converted merely one-third of America’s passenger cars and light trucks to diesel, we’d reduce our oil consumption by up to 1.4 million barrels of oil per day–precisely the amount we import from Saudi Arabia.)

Read the article.

Electric Vehicles – 150 miles on a charge

Hybrid Technologies, Inc. boasts of a lithium battery system that will allow drivers to travel 150 miles after charging the batteries for 6 hours.

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Avis rents hybrids!


As I have mentioned previously, I travel frequently for work and rent cars wherever I go. I usually book the car through Hotwire.com and rent the lowest priced midsized or smaller car. Almost every time I get to the rental desk I ask if they have any hybrid vehicles. They usually say, “No, but we get asked that a lot.” They seem to have gotten the point.

On Tuesday, when I returned my car to Avis at Ontario (California) airport, I couldn’t believe the site that presented itself. There were four, brand-spanking new Prius cars.

Let’s reinforce the message and continue to request and actually rent these hybrid cars. By the way, every time I rent from Avis, I get 5 free iTunes.

Flexcar.com

A work associate of mine rented a car in LA today from Flexcar. This company has cars at various locations throughout several US cities, including hybrids, that are available to rent. Once you are a member of Flexcar, you can just reserve one of these cars, use your membership card to open the door of the car, and drive away.

Fox Rent-a-Car Revisited

I gave Fox Rent-a-Car another chance. This went better than last time but I still can’t recommend this company. See my previous posts here and here.

At San Diego Airport, there is no main car rental depot. The rental agencies are spread out in the community around the airport. So, you must take the shuttle bus for your rental company.

  • Problem #1: While waiting for the Fox shuttle, it seemed as if 5 Hertz and Avis shuttles passed by, along with 3 each for Dollar, Budget, National and even one called Advantage.

When I got to the agency, I told the agent about my prior experience with their company in San Jose. Then, he left the room twice to speak to his boss and I overheard him speaking in hushed tones over the walkie-talkie to a co-worker. I gleaned from the whispers that they didn’t have a Honda Civic Hybrid for me, the car I reserved. He quickly arranged an “upgrade” to a Prius. I was okay with that.

The car was great. I drove about 100 miles, mostly freeway. I loved watching the display of my fuel efficiency as I drove. I averaged a slightly disappointing 43.3 mpg. I was happy however about how little I was polluting the air.

Dropping the car off was a bit time consuming as well. The other major rental agencies do the check-out process at the car with a hand-held computer. At Fox, you have to go inside and wait in line to check-out.

Here are my overall ratings for Fox Rent-a-Car:

  • San Jose:
    • Don’t count on them having the car you reserved.
    • I have been assured by the franchise owner/manager that in the future, they will actually help you find another car (at a comparable price) if they are unable to provide you with one.
  • San Diego:
    • Don’t count on them having the car you reserved.
    • Definitely call them from the baggage claim area to confirm that a shuttle is on its way.
    • Make sure you let them know if you are at the commuter air terminal.
    • Leave extra time for pickup and drop-off.

$4 per Gallon

ABC News reports that gasoline prices in San Francisco topped $4.00 per gallon this week.

The article notes that,

Gas prices often shoot up in the spring, as refineries make the switch to summer-blend gasolines, creating glitches in supply. But the standoff with Iran has inflicted a double whammy on prices.

This is great news! Let’s hope for $5 per gallon by the end of the year.

The worst rental car ever

Yesterday I had the misfortune of renting a Chevy HHR from Avis in Southern California. The underwhelming 4-cylinder engine felt like I was riding on a large lawn mower. I can live with a weak engine, especially if it is a fuel efficient car (which the HHR isn’t). I consider fuel efficient to be anything over 40mpg. The PR states that the car gets 30 mpg, which is in all likelihood fresh from a tune-up, going downhill with a strong tail-wind.

The fuselage of the car is large, nearly 15 feet long. Motortrend boasts, “[The HHR will] let you take your favorite eight-foot ladder wherever you go.” And they mean inside the vehicle. Avis calls this a “mid-sized car”. Chevy considers it an “SUV Crossover”.

Frankly, I don’t care that the design looks remarkably like the PT Cruiser. The worst part about this vessel, is the lack of visibility. It is as if the good people at Chevrolet have encased you in the lunar module and generously provided a couple of portholes in the back through which you can catch glimpses of earth. I am not sure what HHR stands for – and I can’t think of a clever acronym at the moment. The car should be called the Chevy Blind Spot and should be avoided at all costs!

BTW: I have gotten into the habit recently, when renting a car, of asking if they have any Hybrids. We should all keep asking until the major agencies get a clue and start offering them.

Fox Rent-a-Car Left Me Hanging

My letter to Fox Rent-a Car…

Dear Madam or Sir,I flew into San Jose Airport in California on March 7 with a reservation for a Honda Civic Hybrid. I was really looking forward to renting a hybrid. So much so, that I posted about it on my blog here. To my chagrin, when I arrived at the airport, the guy behind the counter let me know that not only didn’t they have a hybrid for me, they had no cars at all. He said it in a nonchalant way, and added that this happens from time to time. Sorry.

I asked if Fox was going to help me rent from another agency, perhaps honor the $44/day rate that I had been promised when I reserved the car online. He said no. I walked down the line asking for quotes from a couple other companies. As you know, when booking at the airport, rates are considerably higher. I wasted about a half hour waiting in line and getting quotes and then got a car from Enterprise for $59/day (Hertz wanted $99!).

I posted my dissatisfaction on my blog here. I am really upset by your company’s lack of integrity around reservations. How difficult would it have been to have the agents call me and the other travelers to let us know we had no rental car waiting for us? These agents (there were two) were just sitting around. They had no business to conduct.

I applaud you for offering hybrid rentals but don’t think that I will risk the inconvenience of arriving and having no car waiting for me. I travel frequently and would have loved to do more for the environment.

Disappointedly yours,
Dan Rosenberg
North Fork, CA