Forum back online. Please post!
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
i would be impossible to have a carbon neutral car, because has to be produced in the first place. and factories use a massive amount of elecricty, and a massive amount of chemical processes and refining fossel fuels to make the plastic parts. so you will infact have a huge carbon foot print before youve even filled the tank.
another carbon plus point for the series, is the avarage car has a life span of 8-10 years
I take it its out of the question just to use less energy?
Quote from: "mark.yellow.series.3"another carbon plus point for the series, is the avarage car has a life span of 8-10 yearsAn interesting point, but is that due to failure of the car or just a lack of demand for 10+ year old cars being the reason for most of them being scraped? After all what % of the population would want an old car if they can so easily have a newer model.
I couldn't give ahoot about my carbon footprint!
I've also spent the weekend driving behind a disco running on 50 - 50 diesel - veg oil and can say the stink of BBQ had me battening down the air vents on the 110Cheers Dave!
Have to say I much prefer the smell of veg oil/biodiesel that carbon monoxide. :-&
Quote from: "biodiesel-queen"Have to say I much prefer the smell of veg oil/biodiesel that carbon monoxide. :-&<pedant>Carbon monoxide's odourless... and it's produced by burning veg oil just as much as fossil fuels - burning any carbon-based fuel without sufficient oxygen will produce it </pedant>
Quote from: "biodiesel-queen"Have to say I much prefer the smell of veg oil/biodiesel that carbon monoxide. :-&Please don't think I'm having a dig though - I don't have any better suggestions than biofuel at the moment and it will only get better as the technology matures.
I was thinking more of the environmental benefits - ie how close to carbon-neutral it is.
Given I'm worried about upsetting my somewhat finicky TD5 with anything other than 100% pure full-fat dino juice, I've taken the alternative route, which is to use the bike instead for local runs, and Abby's nice economical Rover for longer trips when I have a choice... Might chuck some sunflower oil in at some point though and see what breaks!
So, if you're still burning a gallon every, say 28 miles, how does changing to a biofuel reduce your CO2 by 60%, unless there's a doubling of the thermal efficiency in the engine used (which isn't the case)? Burning a kilo of fuel releases X amount of CO2 regardless of how it's burnt. :?
where are we gonna grow all these oil producing plants, becuase looking at the numbers of gallons per acre and what have you, it doesn't add up.