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Why automakers don't sell a car that gets 50mpg.

 
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So gas just hit another miserable milestone. Unleaded regular is averaging a record $3.30 a gallon and seems likely to blast past $4 by Memorial Day. Wouldn't it be great if you could drive a car that gets 50 miles per gallon? Well, you can. Just hop on a plane and fly to Europe, where all new cars average 43mpg, or Japan, where the average hits 50mpg. Here in the United States, we're stuck at 25mpg in our considerably larger and more powerful cars, trucks and SUVs. So why can't we do better? Here's the dirty little secret: we can. "If you want better fuel economy, it's just a question of when auto companies want to do it and when consumers decide they want to buy it," says Don Hillebrand, a former Chrysler engineer who is now director of transportation research for Argonne National Labs. "Auto companies can deliver it within a year."

A 50mpg car would certainly put a tiger in the tank of the moribund U.S. auto industry. But don't get your checkbook out quite yet. The reality is that you won't see a car on a showroom floor in America with 50mpg on the window sticker for at least three years and maybe longer. Sure, all auto companies are focusing on jacking up fuel economy, especially since Congress just mandated that all new autos sold by 2020 must average 35mpg. The new mileage mantra also is motivated by the fact that car sales are weak, partially because of panic at the pump. But putting out a 50mpg car any time soon is daunting even to the maker of America's mileage champ, the 48mpg Toyota Prius. "We're close enough to spit at that now," says Bill Reinert, Toyota's national manager of advanced technologies. "It's not an incredible stretch, but it's an incredible stretch to do it on a mass-market basis."

It might seem ludicrous to you that there isn't a mass market right here and now for a 50mpg car. For crying out loud, we've entered the age of the $128 fill-up. (The cost of topping off a Chevy Suburban). But here's the problem: to get to 50mpg in the near future, consumers would have to trade off at least one of three very important things—cost, drive quality or safety. That's because the quickest way to make a car more fuel-efficient is to make it smaller, lighter and equip it with some high-tech (a.k.a. costly) propulsion system like a plug-in gas-electric system.

Consider the exercise Ford just went through. It ran a computer simulation on what would happen to the mileage of a Ford Focus small car if you built it entirely out of lightweight aluminum. Losing the steel allowed the Focus to drop 1,000 pounds—30 percent of its body weight. That enabled Ford to outfit it with a tiny one-liter engine, half the size of its old engine, but far more fuel efficient because of new technology. Best of all, the small motor goes just as fast as the big one because the car is so much lighter. The result: fuel economy on this fabulous Focus went from 35mpg to 50mpg. What's stopping Ford from moving this car from pixels to pavement? The cost of an all-aluminum car could top $50,000—not a sum the typical economy-car buyer is willing to pay. "What's going to be the cost acceptance for this much improvement in fuel economy?" asks Dan Kapp, director of Ford's advanced engines and transmissions. "We don't know yet."

Still, all the major automakers are putting their cars on a crash diet. Ford wants to drop 250 to 750 pounds in all its models by 2012. Toyota and Nissan want to cut the fat by 10 to 15 percent. But this slim-fast campaign is running into the drive for more safety features in automobiles. Back in the 1980s, the Honda CRX-HF and the Geo Metro each got more than 50mpg, but they didn't have airbags or steel beams in their doors to protect occupants in a crash. These days, cars are equipped with six air bags, steel safety cages and electronic stability control to prevent spinouts. That makes cars much safer—but a lot fatter. "We are working in two directions," says Toyota's Reinert. "One is to make cars as safe as possible, and that generally makes them heavier. And the other is to make cars as fuel efficient as possible."

Downsizing also has its drawbacks. For starters, U.S. highway statistics show the smallest cars have death rates 2.5 times higher than the biggest. What's more, wimpy engines often (under) power small cars and that's a drawback many Americans won't abide. I recently drove the diminutive Smart car for a week. While it's certainly cute, its puny 70-horsepower engine and slow-shifting transmissions made me feel like Fred Flintstone could outrun me. That might be enough power for twisty Old World roads, but here in America, we have a need for speed. "Going zero to 60 in 15 seconds doesn't fit the average American consumers idea of mobility today," says Reinert. "That's too doggy."

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: ramospk @ 05/30/2008 10:19:35 AM

    One other thing I forgot: When evaluating plug-in vehicles like the GM Volt, one has to take into account the total monthly cost of ownership. Not just what you pay at the gas pump. It is idiotic to reason that you have achieved huge savings without taking into account how much your electricity bill is going to increase by plugging that battery to charge every night.

  • Posted By: ramospk @ 05/30/2008 9:58:36 AM

    This is an incredibly poorly reasoned article. It begins by telling us that 50MPG cars are already available in Europe, but then absolutely ignores that fact by reasoning with American manufacturers on why it cannot be done! Hello!? It IS already accomplished in Europe. Read your own notes. Furthermore, it goes on to say that safety and comfort needs to be sacrificed. In my experience, I do not think cars are less safe in Europe and Japan than in the US. Cars do not need steel cages to be safe. Clever design can accomplish the same using carbon fiber or aluminum. Where is the steel cage in a F-1 race car? where is the steel in a Cessna airplane?.

    Besides, building a car like a sherman tank makes it safe for the tank, not for the people inside. Drop an egg inside a steel box, and drop another egg inside a crumpled aluminum foil enclosure and see which one fares better. Also you can make the opposite argument as well: driving Hummers and Suburbans makes it unsafe???for other cars on the road.

    The author says that Ford???s cost in aluminum is upwards of $50K. Why even approach that line of reasoning? Didn???t he just say that in Europe they reach over 50 mpg? Do they use all aluminum? Do Europeans or Japanese spend that kind of money on a small commuter car? Of course not!

    Finally, it is a GIVEN that there has to be some paradigm shift in order to lower the cost at the pump. I have never spoken to a person that is waiting for a 50mpg Hummer. They KNOW they need to sacrifice on internal space and acceleration.

  • Posted By: ramospk @ 05/30/2008 9:57:21 AM

    This is an incredibly poorly reasoned article. It begins by telling us that 50MPG cars are already available in Europe, but then absolutely ignores that fact by reasoning with American manufacturers on why it cannot be done! Hello!? It IS already accomplished in Europe. Read your own notes. Furthermore, it goes on to say that safety and comfort needs to be sacrificed. In my experience, I do not think cars are less safe in Europe and Japan than in the US. Cars do not need steel cages to be safe. Clever design can accomplish the same using carbon fiber or aluminum. Where is the steel cage in a F-1 race car? where is the steel in a Cessna airplane?.

    Besides, building a car like a sherman tank makes it safe for the tank, not for the people inside. Drop an egg inside a steel box, and drop another egg inside a crumpled aluminum foil enclosure and see which one fares better. Also you can make the opposite argument as well: driving Hummers and Suburbans makes it unsafe???for other cars on the road.

    The author says that Ford???s cost in aluminum is upwards of $50K. Why even approach that line of reasoning? Didn???t he just say that in Europe they reach over 50 mpg? Do they use all aluminum? Do Europeans or Japanese spend that kind of money on a small commuter car? Of course not!

    Finally, it is a GIVEN that there has to be some paradigm shift in order to lower the cost at the pump. I have never spoken to a person that is waiting for a 50mpg Hummer. They KNOW they need to sacrifice on internal space and acceleration.

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