Energy, Technology & Science, Travel

Three Months of Hybrid Experience

11.03.08 | Permalink | Comments Off on Three Months of Hybrid Experience
2005 Honda Civic Hybrid

When I purchased my Honda Hybrid back in July, gas prices in California were hovering right around $5/gallon. As I write this, they’re now a little over $3/gallon. What a change. And, don’t get used to it, they’ll be going back up as the era of cheap gas is long gone. As the economy recovers so too will the price of gas. But that’s a subject for another blog entry…

When I was making the decision to buy this car, I had visions of grandeur where I would buy a Prius, convert it to a plug-in electric hybrid vehicle, have access to the carpool lanes, and pay not very much for fuel while doing it. Fortunately, my pragmatic side kicked in and forced me to examine the realities of my situation: I have no time for projects. I needed access to the carpool lane, nothing more, nothing less. The price of fuel has almost zero bearing on my life, so why be obsessed with the gas mileage? Ultimately, I concluded that I needed car pool lane access stickers attached to the cheapest reasonably safe vehicle I could find and that all pointed toward the Honda Civic. (And, I do have to admit I still think the Prius is dorky looking. The Civic will win no design awards, but at least it just looks like a regular sedan.)

That pragmatism saved me about $15,000 of the overall acquisition/improvement price tag (difference in price between Honda and Toyota + PHEV conversion kit.) Now, having driven nearly 6,000 miles, I appreciate my pragmatic side all the more. By the numbers, here’s what this car has done for me:

  • Saved Time – As I whiz by the lanes of traffic looking like long conga lines at 60 mph, I have to admit, I do feel smug. Why? The average time savings per commute leg is 15 minutes during peak traffic. Seventy-five percent of my commuting falls into this area, chalk up twenty-two and one-half hours I wasn’t on the road being frustrated over the past 3 months. How do you put a price on that?
  • Reduced Fuel Consumption – Six thousand miles commuted at 47 mpg or 18 mpg, you choose? The difference in consumption is 128 gallons vs. 333 gallons. At an average price of $4 per gallon, that’s $820 in hard, cold cash in my pocket vs. my prior commute vehicle. That’s like getting paid $273 per month to drive my car.
  • Reduced Emissions – The EPA estimates that there is approximately 19.4 lbs of carbon dioxide emitted for each gallon of gasoline consumed. That means this car has eliminated nearly 4,000 lbs of carbon dioxide. The equivalent of planting nearly two acres of trees to offset the carbon emission from the prior commute vehicle.
  • Generally Improved My Quality of Life – Since I spend less frustrating time in the car, I spend less money, and I’m helping the environment serendipitously, I would label this car experiment a success.

Now, is it perfect? No. I don’t particularly like the fit and finish of the vehicle. It’s something like a heavy tin can in handling an feel. I don’t like the whine of the motor/generator. I don’t like it that in 95F weather that the car shuts off the ventilation system at stops (though it’s easy to work around.) I don’t like the creature comforts (or lack thereof.) The geometry of the car is bad, the dash is too far for things like mobile phones, the center console hardly exists, getting drinks in and out of the front cup holders is an invitation to change pants.

But, on the balance, I’m glad to have purchased the vehicle and hope to get many more years of service from it.

Commentary, Politics

Sunday School with Bill Maher

11.02.08 | Permalink | Comments Off on Sunday School with Bill Maher

Watch this short video for an entertaining Sunday School lesson:





A summary of lessons:

  • No Religious Test to hold OfficeIt’s right there in the Constitution. It’s not vague, it’s not subject to interpretation, why is it being ignored?
  • Santa == Jesus – Many of us now realize they’re the same guy. How long before the rest wake up?
  • Twenty Percent is a Large Minority – You know, 20% is a large minority. And just because people who think religion is wacky are a minority, it doesn’t make us wrong.
  • The Magic Underwear Rule – All religions are require nutjob thinking. Magic underwear is no more wacky than Thetans which is no more wacky than talking burning bushes. Judge them all equally, after all, they do deserve it.
  • Rationalists are not the Crazy Ones – And, we vote. Hopefully, in ever increasing numbers. Watch out, this is the most important fight America will face, recovery from theocracy.

Politics

Effigy Antics Need to Stop

11.02.08 | Permalink | Comments Off on Effigy Antics Need to Stop
Are we sinking to this level of discourse?
Burning in effigy is the tool of religious fanatics

Yesterday in Battle, England, Sarah Palin was burned and blown up in effigy. Thankfully, this didn’t happen in America, but it’s still not cool, not funny, nor is it called for. It’s exactly the same spirit and sentiment of Barack Obama being hung in effigy in Ohio.

C’mon people, you may not like these folks, you may not agree with them, but there is simply no excuse for these kinds of displays. (And I have to admit, the last thing I thought I would be writing on the Sunday morning before the election is this entry – a piece coming to the defense of Governor Palin.)

Feeling frustrated? Take your energy to the phones before election day and to the polls on election day. Make your voice heard. And for you cheeky English buggers, (recognizing you can’t vote here,) don’t you have some of your own problems to attend to?

OK, that’s it, go about your business. Nothing more to see here…

Politics

My Anti-Contribution To Prop 8

11.01.08 | Permalink | 8 Comments
Click this sort of Ad to spend the “Yes on Prop 8” campaign’s money
Click on the

I’m so sick of this election – I can’t wait for it to be over. That being said, as I’m surfing the web this evening I’ve been inundated with Yes on 8 advertisements spewing their hate and bigotry in my direction. So…..I’ve decided to click the ads. Why? Because each time I click (or you click, or your friends click) it spends the money of the campaign on someone who won’t vote for it. Think of this as creative anti-contribution to the campaign.

Yahoo Sports is rife with these ads, I encourage you to surf on over and click a few hundred times. If you like this idea, spread it around.

Update: Apparently this idea has some legs, it appears to have been Stumbled and submitted to Hacker News. For the record, I haven’t advocated using bots to do this because that would be a DoS attack. While I disagree with Yes on 8, the campaign does have a right to communicate their message of hate and bigotry and a DoS approach would deny them their First Amendment right.

But I don’t think that humans clicking, making a conscious decision to do so, rises to the level of such an attack and certainly doesn’t interfere with their First Amendment rights. It simply bleeds money from the campaign.



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