AndySpill
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andy
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2023
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- 71
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- Location
- Pittsburgh
- Vehicle(s)
- 2018 JL Sahara
I fully realize that this thread seeks to measure how much fuel engine start stop systems save.
Answers here are expected in measures of volume and time. In other words “you'll save x milliliters of fuel for every z seconds the engine is off, but consume y milliliters of fuel you wouldn't have to to restart the engine, such that after this many seconds after some threshold with the engine off, you'll save this much “dinosaur juice” per minute."
It doesn't seek to factor in the cost of more wear and tear on batteries or moving parts, or even the additional environment footprint of equipping and replacing such components sooner, that only fairly needs to be offset against the air pollution and greenhouse gas savings that engine start stop systems save us from. And these engine start/stop systems do definitely save appreciable amounts of fuel across all the vehicles with this technology, if not whopping large amounts at that.
And yet, interesting topic though it is, IMHO none of this really gets at the heart of the matter of what is attempted to be achieved by such engine stop systems, much that you're free to believe/disbelieve that the goal is attainable or necessary/good, or that if good intentions are even the case here, that such policy is well written, flawed, or somewhere in between. (IMHO there are many flaws with the EPA rules that qualify a vehicle for the more favorable gas mileage ratings of such systems. Case in point, how many JL owner's ESS system stopped working about a month after ownership?)
At their heart, the CAFE standards that motivate engine start stop systems seek to raise the market cost of ICE vehicles more and more over time, which in theory makes electric ones, relatively speaking, less expensive, such that people in turn buy them in the larger quantities, that again in theory (and yes, somewhat in practice) lower the cost of electric propulsion's purchase price, through innovation and economies of scale.
And do electric vehicles themselves have a tail pipe, if not literally in the back of the vehicle, then in the green footprint of their manufacture, how their electric is created, and ultimate demise after years of use: you bet.
Sometimes it almost feels like we are, rather than solving environmental problems, replacing ones seen as more urgent (fossil fuel emissions) for ones that right now are less pressing (burying unusable old battery components in the ground and polluting land) but that may no less come to "bite us in the ass" down the line.
My $0.02, off soapbox.
Answers here are expected in measures of volume and time. In other words “you'll save x milliliters of fuel for every z seconds the engine is off, but consume y milliliters of fuel you wouldn't have to to restart the engine, such that after this many seconds after some threshold with the engine off, you'll save this much “dinosaur juice” per minute."
It doesn't seek to factor in the cost of more wear and tear on batteries or moving parts, or even the additional environment footprint of equipping and replacing such components sooner, that only fairly needs to be offset against the air pollution and greenhouse gas savings that engine start stop systems save us from. And these engine start/stop systems do definitely save appreciable amounts of fuel across all the vehicles with this technology, if not whopping large amounts at that.
And yet, interesting topic though it is, IMHO none of this really gets at the heart of the matter of what is attempted to be achieved by such engine stop systems, much that you're free to believe/disbelieve that the goal is attainable or necessary/good, or that if good intentions are even the case here, that such policy is well written, flawed, or somewhere in between. (IMHO there are many flaws with the EPA rules that qualify a vehicle for the more favorable gas mileage ratings of such systems. Case in point, how many JL owner's ESS system stopped working about a month after ownership?)
At their heart, the CAFE standards that motivate engine start stop systems seek to raise the market cost of ICE vehicles more and more over time, which in theory makes electric ones, relatively speaking, less expensive, such that people in turn buy them in the larger quantities, that again in theory (and yes, somewhat in practice) lower the cost of electric propulsion's purchase price, through innovation and economies of scale.
And do electric vehicles themselves have a tail pipe, if not literally in the back of the vehicle, then in the green footprint of their manufacture, how their electric is created, and ultimate demise after years of use: you bet.
Sometimes it almost feels like we are, rather than solving environmental problems, replacing ones seen as more urgent (fossil fuel emissions) for ones that right now are less pressing (burying unusable old battery components in the ground and polluting land) but that may no less come to "bite us in the ass" down the line.
My $0.02, off soapbox.
Sponsored
Edit- maybe ok with e-torque ?