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Unfortunately, the one thing we never see is a solution uses the best systems into one car. In other words, what if your car could recharge with electricity but if none was around, could also accept gasoline, diesel, cooking oil, CNG, bio-fuel and even hydrogen? While cars that can be recharged with electricity and have an onboard gasoline engine exist in the shape of hybrids, HEV and plug-in hybrids, PHEV, how come they are only limited to gasoline?
Technological Restrictions. In all fairness, automakers do the best with what they have. After all, the majority of their assembly lines are tweaked for the manufacturing internal combustion engines and assembling rolling stocks around these gasoline guzzlers. The switch from a gasoline-powered car to one assisted with an electric motor took more than a few ideas and proof of concept. It took finding a feasible solution with an electric motor coupled with nickel metal hydride and then later lithium batteries, implementing a new assembly line for it, training computer programmers to understand the intricacies of the automobile industry and much, much more. It?s a wonder hybrids are even on the road today. What it boils down to is feasibility and research tends to stagnate. This is also the reason why we will not see any time soon a series/parallel plug-in hybrid that can take most known form of energy. It simply would be too expensive to develop, without taking into consideration most of the infrastructure is simply non-existent and user demand is not there due to lack of understanding.
How About Flexibility?. Nonetheless, if a truly multi-energy car is close to impossible for big automakers to practically build and operate, how come we don?t have more flexibility with current hybrids? One of the question asked by people who would like to use alternative energy for cars is why can?t we have the best of all worlds? In other words, how come we still don?t have a plug-in hybrid that uses a 3-cylinder turbo single-ramp diesel engine? It?s not as if the technology isn?t there and surely almost all car manufacturers have some sort of diesel engines these days. Why are we stuck with the gasoline and electric design?s only choice? The question becomes an even more pressing one when we see how far diesel technology has come and how much cleaner CNG is to use. Why not help it with an electric motor?
The answers are many, ranging from the exorbitant development costs to user understanding and demanding of the technology. Unfortunately, carmakers want to maximize their shrinking profits and give us ultimately little choice. It?s a wonder when considering both CNG and diesel technology is available and has done its proof. Imagine how much more efficient a diesel and a CNG hybrid would be.
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