Posts Tagged ‘cars’

Model RC Racing Cars

Friday, December 25th, 2009

Do your interests in model remote control cars lie in high speed, rapid acceleration and magnificence of form? If this is exactly what you are looking for in a model vehicle, then a model sports car is almost certainly what you are looking for. Authentic size sports cars are a $4.5 billion industry with about 55,000 units being sold every year.

Sports cars and their model counterparts are manufactured as high performance machines, which means that they can be driven in ways that normal assembly line cars can not. For example, in the case of a real sports car, it frequently takes no more than five seconds to go from 0 to 100 mph. Likewise in a model high performance gas replica, it often takes no more than two seconds to reach 60 mph from a dead start.

Because it is more tricky to maneuver a speeding vehicle, sports cars and model sports cars are especially designed to handle best at high speeds. In deed, the word “sporty” was coined to refer to a sleek but robust design that exudes power. It was later personified to refer to the person behind the wheel or in the modelling world, the person at the remote controls.

The following is a basic glossary of sports car terminology and a basic listing of sports car manufacturers (many of which have their counterpart machines in the world of model gas remote control cars).

- FF - front engine, front wheel drive. The FF layout has a moderate capability for high speed handling and is seen in some models such as the Fiat Coup?, and the Lotus Elan M100.

- FR - front engine, rear wheel drive Considered the ?classic? sports car layout, the engine drives the rear wheels but keeps the weight off the back. The FR is good at drifting corners while still maintaining control. Mercedes-Benz is recognized for using this design for its models.

- RR - rear engine, rear wheel drive With the engine at the back powering the rear wheels, weight placement on a RR design provides outstanding traction for a car. However, without auxiliary driving aids like stability control, handling becomes difficult. These days, the only maker who keeps the RR layout for its cars is Porche.

AWD - all wheel drive An AWD design offers the easiest handling, making it perfect for those who are just starting to race sports cars. Audi started the widespread use of this technique with the Quattro. Japanese makers like Mitsubishi employed this layout to increase handling, making it an excellent rally car.

Because of more stringent regulations in the United States, sports car manufacturers are more widespread in Europe than in America. Nevertheless, American makes are in equal competition with their European and Asian counterparts. Some recognized manufacturers and models are:

Alfa Romeo; Alpine; Aston Martin; Austin-Healey; BMW; Bugatti; Caterham; Davrian; De Lorean; Ferrari; Fisker; Jaguar; Koenigsegg; Lamborghini; Lotus; McLaren; Maserati; MG; Morgan; Panoz; Porsche; Triumph; TVR; Vector.

If this piece has whetted your appetite for a sports car, go out and buy one now, if you are wealthy. If not, why not do the next best thing and buy yourself a 1:8 or even a 1:5 gas-powered, radio-controlled sports car?

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with the petrol remote control car. If you have an interest in model or toy rc vehicles, please go over to our website now at 1/5 Scale RC Cars

Porsche 977

Friday, December 11th, 2009

A new Porsche 911 is always intriguing because it’s exciting to see how after more than 40 years of improvement the Porsche team still manages to bring changes and advancements to this iconic model.

The new 997 blends the silky modern looks of the 996 series with the fashionable retro styling of the older 911’s. The front end is finished with round lights and separate parking/fog/indicator lights. This modification, coupled with wider hips echoes the last of the air-cooled 911’s, the 993. Other changes in the body shell are the new door handles, wing mirrors and the trendy cut of the rear wings into the bumper/lights.

Even if the 997 looks a lot like the previous model, the 996, the new car is actually 38mm wider which creates a more forceful look. With each new model introduced, Porsche has attempted to lessen the drag co-efficient helping the 911 slide through the air more effectively thus increasing performance. The same thing has been done with the new car, and if we compare the 993 Cd of 0.34 to the 997`s 0.28, we can see how far the aerodynamic game has moved on. The latest body shell and rear wing combine with new under body paneling to also offer improved levels of down force for this latest generation of Porsche’s finest.

The latest Porsche model has the best handling 911 ever. Improving a car’s rigidity helps ensure that the suspension can work more effectively and while not making such a quantum leap as the team did with the 996, Porsche enhanced torsional rigidity by 8% and added as much as 40% more strength.

For their new model car, Porsche sought to enhance crash safety provisions so they added two new air bags, which are located in the side of each front seat back-rest and are calculated to protect the thorax. They also kept the earlier two front and two side airbags, which means that now there are six air bags in total. For the same reason, that is crash safety, the reinforced body shell features additional protection such as a more widespread use of very high strength steel.

The most recent model is also 50 kg heavier than the 996. The reason is that modern crash safety regulations sort of force vehicle makers to produce new cars of increased weight, despite the prevalent use of a large range of weight saving measures, such as an aluminum bonnet.

Aside from the crash safety advancements, much of the increased weight can be attributed to the higher standard specifications of the new cars. The power to weight ratio is analogous with the latest car offering 233 bhp per tonne against it’s predecessors 238 but the new model’s superior aerodynamics must help it achieve Porsche’s claimed performance figures, which are identical to those of the 996.

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Don’t Do This When Purchasing Used Cars

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Nowadays, life can be pretty hard. Everything is increasing with prices rising quickly. This makes us all targets of potential scams and frauds. This is really a big problem with high dollar items like automobiles.

Used car scams have victimized numerous used-car buyers. One example is from the show Andy Griffith, where Barney buys his first car from a con-artist posing as a helpless old lady. The car turns out to be a real lemon, and Andy helps to arrest the cons. In real life, there isn’t always a happy ending like in Mayberry. It is important to know what you need to be on the lookout for when dealing with car sellers, so that your next buy isn’t a lemon.

Knowing the different tactics can make you more aware of the common tricks used by car crooks. Knowledge is power and it can save you a lot of money and heartache if you know what to look for.

Car theft is a huge problem in this country. Fewer stolen vehicles are being recovered because of “chop shops” and export rings. Stolen cars are “stripped down” and sold for used auto parts. Sometimes the crooks even fit the cars with legitimate serial and registration numbers from old cars that had been destroyed previously. Stolen cars are sometimes discovered when a police officer apprehends the suspect for other reasons.

Shopping for a older car is no small task. Be certain to hold these thoughts in mind when you set off to purchase a classic car.

1. Go with your gut feelings on offers that are seemingly too good to be true. Every day, hundreds of ordinary car collectors buy stolen cars and then face the possibility of police seizure of their new car.

2. Collectors should avoid purchasing old vehicles from sellers that do not provide a permanent address or the actual work phone number so you can do a quick background check.

3. It is important for a buyer to check on the VIN or the vehicle identification number plate. It should be firmly fastened onto the used car’s dashboard, with no rivets that are loosened.

4. Also, the buyer should also pass up purchasing used cars that have VIN plates that are touched up, its paint is recently retouched, and the numbers appear as if they are not the original factory numbers. VIN plates can be without a doubt traded by a thief and make use of those that are removed from a wrecked vehicle.

5. As much as possible, it would be better to stay away from purchasing a used car that is recently painted. There are instances wherein the stolen automobiles identity is being modified through covering up its original paint.

6. Used automobile buyers should avoid purchasing cars from a seller that cannot present the cars insurance policy. This could mean that the car is stolen or the peddler is not the true owner of the car.

It is exceedingly important for the buyers to know these thoughts ahead of purchasing a older car. An bit of prevention really is worth a pound of cure!

Buy Old Cars is the place to find Old Cars! Find the perfect Ford Grand Torino!

Myths Spread about Hybrid Vehicles

Monday, October 5th, 2009

If you are thinking about a hybrid car, you may be hearing quite a bit of “talk”. Some people think the hybrid car is the best thing on the market. Some people say it’ll just pass. Other people say they think they can save a lot of money, but you’re not sure it’s really worth it. What’s the truth, and how do you separate myth from fact with all of the stuff that is being thrown at you? Below, you can read and understand the common hybrid car myths.

Hybrid cars are just the same as electric cars: This is untrue because hybrid vehicles are fuel-powered for the most part. They have what are called ‘battery assists’. The assist is powered by a nickel-metal hydride battery pack that is rechargeable.

You are guaranteed to save money with a hybrid vehicle: If you are doing city driving, you may economize on fuel and you may not. The same goes for highway driving. There are just too many different factors involved. It has been said that if everyone bought hybrid cars, the gas consumption would drop by only 10%. That’s not a very big difference, is it?

A hybrid vehicle’s battery can run flat: A hybrid car battery should not run flat when you are actually driving it. The engine in a hybrid vehicle does not idle when stopped (at a red light for example). What does it do then? Well, it recharges its battery. So there is no need to worry about a hybrid car stopping for that reason.

The hybrid car’s rechargeable battery lasts only for 2 years: A hybrid car definitely would not be worth purchasing if this was the case. A hybrid car’s rechargeable batteries usually come with an eight-year warranty.

If I run out of fuel, I can keep driving on the hybrid vehicle battery: Keep in mind, a hybrid car’s battery is an assist. That means that hybrid car’s still run on fuel. After you run out of gas, the battery could keep the car running for a short while. However, the car will cease running very soon.

Hybrid cars will soon put conventional car dealers out of business: I’m sure that this won’t happen anytime soon. The reason for the delay has to do with the how much hybrids cost. Most people just can’t afford one. Also, people just aren’t certain whether they will actually save money by buying a hybrid car. Therefore, they are loathe to join the rush of people who want to buy a hybrid vehicle.

Hybrid cars will only save you about 88USD per annum: I did see something on the news the other day, but it may be untrue. If there’s something you really want and there’s a lot of gossip surrounding it, you simply have got to start digging around and do some research yourself. There are many different types of hybrid car, and many different manufacturers make them. This means that there may be much more involved than we have discussed here. A hybrid car may help you, and it may not, but the final decision is up to you.

So, don’t worry too much about what people say. Do your own research and make up your own mind. Use the Internet to get information. The manufacturer’s advertising is also useful, if you stick to reading the facts and gloss over the hype. Check that what the literature claims is also in the guarantee.

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Will A $40,000 Volt Save GM?

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Amongst GM employees, aside from the fear of getting a pink paper next week ( or the week after ) speculation is high as to whether the concept vehicle, being called the Volt, is going to be as revolutionary as the hype suggests.

GM, Ford and Chrysler arrayed a huge number of lawyers and much cherished Washington lobbyists to go after California after it decided to introduce a zero emissions rule on part of all car fleets. While GM was fighting California, it was also building an electric car, 10 years ago called the EV1. The state lost, GM breathed a sigh of relief and promptly destroyed all EV1’s and sold the patents.

Yep, sold the patents to a MIT. Just kidding. If the patents had been sold to MIT, the car would have been rebuilt and the Toyota Prius hybrid would never have been created. Whoever bought the patents wasn’t interested in building an electric car. There is enough anecdotal evidence to suggest the battery patents were purchased by Texaco who has done tremendous work with them since ( NOT ).

Balancing the books, one might claim. Lots of Research and Development costs, nothing to show for it, so sell the technology. It wasn’t an objective decision. After an acrimonious battle with the state of California, GM management couldn’t get rid of the technology fast enough. A billion dollars later, GM executives didn’t stop to think that perhaps core elements could play a critical roll in future transportation technology. They had to wait for the Japanese to prove that similar technology could and would be a huge element in the future of transportation.

So much for the history lesson, this week, we are back at square one watching a video interview with GM’s Chief Designer as he discusses the new GM Chevy Volt.

GM has almost entirely “bet the boat” on the new technologies going to market in the electric Chevy Volt. We are sure that GM Detroit Management exactly didn’t plan it this way, but their European operations must have seen the writing on the wall many years ago as gas hit 3+ dollars per gallon in europe and continued on through the equivalent $4 dollar mark. With the global credit crunch, increased gas prices and declining sales of the big cash SUV’s GM is feeling the pinch like never before. The Volt must become iconic.

GM’s response to public outcry shortly after co-jointly winning the lawsuit against California on the grounds that only the federal government had the right to determine zero emission, was to go on a publicity campaign extolling the virtues of their own version of Zero emissions - Hydrogen gas by 2010. Which probably prompted BMW to wake up and create a wonderful Hydrogen Gas vehicle which is already 4-5 years old and in its fourth or fifth refinement. So zip forward to 2008 and GM has backtracked on its Hydrogen promises and is now attempting to leap frog the Toyota Prius with technology that will get a commuter 40 miles of gas free driving on a nightly electrical charge.

According to GM research, many drivers will not need to switch to the gas engine because simply recharging the vehicle via a regular outlet at home overnight will satisfy most of their driving needs. When I first heard this, I thought - What a useless car. Who wants a car that does only 40 miles per charge, but in truth, the car simply switches to the small gas engine at that point and continues its merry way.

Despite the GM bashing that many of us might engage in, on occasion, we all truly want a Volt or something like it. Traveling and seeing new places isn’t just a wish for the elite. But with gas prices threatening to go higher and the slightest threat of war poised to carry them beyond even the previous high of $147 per barrel, having a vehicle with the potential of the Volt is simply everyone’s dream.

So will or can the dream car Volt save the General?

To answer that question, perhaps we should ask - Does GM need saving?

BusinessWeek estimated GM’s Liquidity position to be 45 Billion in May of 2005 with a burn rate this year of over a Billion a month here in 2008 ( Boston Herald ). Estimated reserves now stand at about 25 Billion and analysts say that even with the 10 Billion in future cost cutting, GM may need another 10-12 Billion in cash to see their way through to 2010.

Detroit News writes in an article on Oct 14th 2008

GM had access to about $21 billion cash and $5 billion in available credit at the end of June and is in the midst of cutting $10 billion in costs by the end of 2009 and raising $5 billion through asset sales and borrowing.

Cost-cutting associated with the aforementioned 10 Billion in cuts, intensified when GM announced it was closing plants in Grand Rapids and Janesville, Wis. 2500 workers are affected by these measures in plants that produce sport-utility vehicles and parts for pickups/SUVs.

Since 2005, the General’s cash reserves have been reduced from 45 Billion to a mere 25 Billion and with the tightening credit crunch and federal government moving slowly on aiding the BIG3, the rumour doing the rounds is that GM is eyeing the cash reserves of Chrysler ( estimated 11 Billion ) to help it through 2009 when the arrival of the Chevy Volt and Cruz, the following quarter are expected to help turn things around.

So, what are our expectations for the Volt? GM says its expecting to sell about 10,000 Chevy Volts at between 30-40,000 USD each in 2010. So, that’s about 3-4 Billion dollars in gross sales with a net of about a 800 Million dollars annually at an estimated 20% profit per car.

So, is this innovative car of the 2010 year - Volt just a little, just too late?

I leave that answer up to you, but if I had to make a serious bet with odds, I know which way I would be betting.

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Hybrid Cars and Plug-in Hybrid Cars

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Hybrid cars are on everyone’s lips. Twenty, forty, or fifty dollars for a full tank of fuel? Who in their right mind wants to pay that sort of money? However, frustrated, the gas customer sighs, but pays up. However, hybrid vehicles are applauded for the small amount of gas they need to operate, and they are being driven off the lots of car dealerships each and everyday in increasing numbers.

But what about a plug-in hybrid? Most consumers have heard that these cars are great too. Then, someone might be asking him or herself, what exactly a plug-in hybrid is? How do they work, and what the difference between a plug-in hybrid and a regular hybrid is?

Plug-in hybrids are capable of running solely on batteries, but they can use fuel also. These sorts of hybrid cars have some of the characteristics of hybrid vehicles. They are also very similar to all-electric vehicles.

Plug-in hybrid cars must be charged externally by plugging them into an electrical power source. The combustion engine of plug-in hybrid vehicles is engaged only as a back up. These cars can run only on batteries if desired, but it is expected that these kinds of hybrid cars are recharged every day.

Hybrid cars can go just as many miles as a conventional car. Designed to go the extra mile where fuel-mileage is concerned, hybrids can be driven on the motorway, in cities, or wherever else a person wants to drive.

On the other hand, plug-in hybrids are designed to be driven commuter-type distances, meaning about twenty to sixty miles between destinations. This way, the plug-in hybrid does not have to use its back up combustion engine, but plug-in hybrids can go further using fuel too.

Hybrids help to reduce pollution, but they do still pollute the air. Compared with plug-in hybrids, hybrid cars still have a long way to go as far as pollution is concerned. Because plug-in hybrid cars can run solely on their battery power, they don’t have to emit waste gases at all.

Plug-in hybrids really do combat greenhouse gas emissions and plug-in hybrids use virtually no oil, imported or not. Studies have shown that electric hybrids emit at least 67% less greenhouse gases compared to diesel cars. Since the electric used to power plug-in hybrids is completely renewable, the difference in greenhouse gas emissions may be even greater than the study determined.

There you have it - the major differences between plug-in hybrids and regular hybrid cars. It could make a big difference, but you would be surprised at how little it actually matters at the moment, but tht’s only because plug-in hybrids are not being sold to consumers yet! But this article should make you excited about the fantastic plug-in hybrid car, which will be featuring soon on a dealership near you.

And it’s going to be a great debut too - people already like regular hybrid cars, but they haven’t seen anything until they see the new plug-in hybrid cars. However, for now, maybe we should just be satisfied with what we already have, because who knows? Before plug-in hybrid cars come out onto the forecourts, something even better might be introduced onto the market.

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Hybrid Honda Cars

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Most of us have heard of the different Honda cars on the forecourt today. You can add to this range of cars the Honda hybrid cars. These hybrid cars include the Honda Accord Hybrid, the Honda Civic hybrid 4 door car and Honda Insight, which is a two seater. These are not the only hybrid cars in Honda’s stable, there are others but these are the more well-known models.

You will find that Honda hybrid cars come in different versions of their popular Honda cars. The Honda Civic hybrid is one such hybrid car that is very popular. This four door compact car is one that you can choose either as a first generation or a second generation car.

The hybrid Honda Civic has a 5 speed manual transmission drive. This particular Honda hybrid car is known as an assist hybrid car. The Honda Civic hybrid is the only hybrid vehicle to have won a top award for the best international engine.

While you can get information about the various models of Honda hybrid cars from the Honda dealers’ websites on the Internet, you might want to go along to the showrooms in person. This will provide you with a better understanding of whether a hybrid car will suit you. Having looked into these details, you can then decide which Honda hybrid type is best for you.

Thus, you can make sure that you are getting a good deal And, speaking of money, you may want to check out the price of other cars that catch your eye in the hybrid Honda car stable. For those who like the appearance of the hybrid car from Honda, you have a choice of previous year’s models or the new batch of Honda hybrid cars. Since there are lots of data you need to scrutinize, when it comes to buying cars, it is probably best if you have the questions you need answered dealt with by a qualified Honda dealer.

By doing this, you can be (sure|assured that you have chosen a Honda hybrid which is not only affordable but is also capable of meeting your needs. The hybrid cars that you can buy will furnish you with lots of benefits both in the long and the short term including keeping your fuel costs down.

Since there are many different cars on the market, you can always be assured that you will find one that suits you. The trusted Honda hybrid is the absolute choice for the discerning hybrid car driver.

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Celebrities That Have Driven Hybrid Cars

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

No, it is certainly not true that you could rise to fame and fortune if you go and buy a hybrid car. But a hybrid car is not only a car for the wealthy and famous. However it might be a good idea for you. Many famous people are driving hybrid cars these days including some of the most well-known on the planet like your favourite film stars. But the big question is, should you be driving a hybrid car at all?

So, are you driving anything like a hybrid car? Well, if you are not, you can’t rub noses with some of these hybrid car-drivers. These people were very early owners of hybrids cars. You may not see them in a hybrid vehicle when they stop next to you on Rodeo Drive, but believe me, they’ve owned a hybrid car before. Whatever, trust me or not they have been reported as owning hybrid cars before even if they were given them for publicity purposes.

Alicia Silverstone This star definitely isn’t clueless about the environment. She knows that driving a hybrid car has many benefits for the environment. And if the general public doesn’t have the understanding that she has, then that’s just hard luck. Alicia knows that hybrid cars are good for the environment and therefore for everyone. So Alicia Silverstone got herself a hybrid car. So she has helped promote this new technology as far as this article is concerned, which has to be a good thing.

Ellen DeGeneres Now then, this funny woman not only has a great haircut, but she was driving a great hybrid car even before you probably even knew about hybrid cars and she was probably smiling at you and your gas-guzzler last time she wizzed past you.

Robin Williams funny and loveable, Robin knew when he played the part of Mrs. Doubtfire that he should probably start thinking more like the forward-thinking driver that you would let transport your children to and from school, so Robin got himself a hybrid car, and he hasn’t ever looked back since.

Ted Danson Cheers! Ted knows a great car when he sees one. He was certainly sober the morning when he decided to go check out the new cars on the lot. He got up and bought a car that made a whole lot of sense. He was making good sense when he chose a hybrid car.

Brad Pitt What’s up? Certainly, not Brad’s petrol bills ‘cos he’s got a hybrid engine! He’s had a hybrid car, so he knows his car isn’t using too much petrol.

Prince Charles Why, surely, if it’s good enough for royalty, then it’s good enough for everyone else? That’s just how you should feel when you drive a hybrid car. You should feel royal, adorned, and envied because believe it or not, that’s exactly what you are when you choose to drive a hybrid vehicle. So make the most of it.

So, do you feel like a million bucks yet? Well, you should if you are thinking of buying a hybrid car and don’t worry, you won’t get your 15 minutes of fame but you will be making a bold statement that people will understand and many people will applaud what you are doing and that will go on for years and years because hybrid cars last for decade or more.

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The Energy Crisis and Hybrid Cars

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

It is said that not enough people are doing enough to fight against the energy crisis. Hybrid cars can help, but definitely not enough people are driving them. Here are a few problems related to the energy crisis and how hybrid cars can help.

The U.S. isn’t doing enough really. The United States uses more fossil fuels than any other country in the world. However, most people think that all of our energy problems can be solved if we would only look further into the oil deposits in Alaska or if we exploited the latest oil discovery in the Gulf of Mexico more.

Hybrid cars can result in us not having to consume other sources of energy to keep the economy growing. Hybrid cars won’t cause Americans to consume more fossil fuel. Rather, hybrid cars make Americans use less fossil fuel.

Energy consumers just accept increasing gas prices. People used to care that petrol prices are much higher now than they were years ago. Now, however, people just accept the higher prices. In the meantime, cars are getting bigger and bigger. Car manufacturers are making trucks and SUVs, which consume more gas at the higher prices.

These vehicles use more petrol, but you would never believe just how many people won’t give up their gas-guzzling SUV. Hybrid vehicles do eventually cost their owners less to own than conventional vehicles do. So there is no need to be concerned about settling for being swindled by the oil companies.

Soon there could be an end to the “cheap oil period”. Soon, we could all be in over our heads, because not only will we be in an fossil fuel crisis, but in a peak oil crisis too. During this peak oil crisis, there will be gas shortages and natural gas shortages too. The major countries will be forced to compete against each another for whatever small amount of fuel is left.

So everyone may have some problems, and countries may battle over who gets oil and who does not. The peak gas crisis can be staved off, if more people just purchased hybrid vehicles. Hybrid vehicles make it so that people do not always have to be looking for oil. And there are advances being made to hybrid cars everyday.

The plug-in hybrid cars, for instance, might not need oil at all one day. So, just in case we do have an energy crisis, Americans should really be using the meantime to get their heads together in order to find a solution to the oil crisis in America. Hybrid vehicles are the way to beat the energy crisis, and if countries still want to fight each other over petrol, at least America will know they attempted to slow the impending crisis by investing in hybrid vehicles.

So, there you have it then. The United States’ mass adoption of hybrid cars would make it so that Americans use less gas. But Americans also have yet to gain from the large amount of money being made from the manufacture of hybrid cars. The majority of popular hybrid vehicles come from Japan. Therefore, Americans need to attract that money back into the country by making hybrids at home and do something about the current energy crisis at the same time.

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The History Of The Hybrid Car

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Just where did a hybrid car get it’s origins? Read on to find out. Hybrid cars are very popular for today’s car buyers and there are many reasons why that should be. But before you even think about choosing a hybrid vehicle to purchase, you might want to know a little about the history of the hybrid first.

Surprisingly, hybrid cars were around even before gas-powered cars. Back in about the year 1665, a Jesuit priest by the name of Ferdinand Verbeist began plans for a certain type of vehicle. That vehicle would be very simple, nothing complex, or intricate. Simple was all he wanted.

So it was that Ferdinand planned out a vehicle that would have four wheels and would run on steam. It took about fifteen years of work for Ferdinand to complete his plan. He laboured to perfect his dream vehicle. But no one knows for certain if he ever finished it because there is no physical evidence that his concept ever came into reality.

Then in 1769, a man with the name of Nicholas Cugnot designed and developed a carriage that was driven by steam. This carriage really did work and it went at six miles per hour. This project was great, but it was difficult to get the amount of steam needed to allow the car to go any significant distance.

A break through in hybrid car development finally came when Robert Anderson developed an electric powered car in 1839. It was the first among its kind. The car was built in Scotland.

This type of electric car was a highly applauded innovation of its time. But, the only problem was that it was very hard to recharge the car’s battery. Some pioneers did come after Anderson, but they had the same problem of getting the battery recharged after a few miles.

Eventually, in the year 1898, Porsche developed an electric and fuel combination combustion engine that was the first of its kind. The car was called the Lohner Electric Chaise and it could go for up to 40 miles just using its batteries.

Soon pioneers combined both a gas and a battery powered engine to power what would become today’s hybrid car. In 1999, Honda made a leap into the US market. It came out with the Insight. This was a lightweight two-door hybrid. Since then, hybrid cars have just been evolving and improving into what you see on the markets today. Hybrid cars aren’t just for techies who think it’s cool to combine battery and fuel power to get them where they need to go. Hybrid cars started out simple, and they are still simple today.

These days hybrid vehicles are becoming more and more popular as people are getting to understand them better. In the 21st century, hybrids saw a big boom in sales after the Toyota Prius came on the market. It was the first hybrid with four doors that was marketed in America.

Soon after, the Ford Escape hybrid became the very first SUV hybrid ever made. So there it is in a nutshell, the history of the hybrid car - today’s modern car.

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