The only thing worse than sitting in rush hour traffic after a hard day's work is passing time by watching the trip computer. Boring, yes, but also distressing. The moment you enter the freeway and slow to a stop, the litres per 100 kilometres indicator starts rising.
It might was well be a cash register. With each tenth of a litre added, the cost of the daily commute goes up, and up, and up. And the hours spent earning the money to pay the cost of getting to work go up, and up, and up.
Frustrating.
But that's just the personal cost. The environmental cost increases significantly too. The more fuel your vehicle consumes per mile crawled, the greater the environmental impact will be.
It doesn't have to be that way.
Highway 417, which dissects Ottawa from East to West, is fairly typical of urban freeways anywhere in Canada. Twenty hours a day, the 417 - or Queensway as it is known here - moves traffic quickly and efficiently across the city. But at rush hour, morning and evening, things get slow, real slow. It is something to be avoided.
But one day recently, it was a trip we couldn't avoid. We drove, or more aptly, inched from Greenbank Road in the West end to Blair Road in the East, a distance of 17 kilometres, in heavy five o'clock traffic. The trip took nearly 40 minutes.
Fuel consumed: zero litres. Not even a decilitre, not an ounce, none, no fuel used.
Full Article
Test Drive: 2006 Toyota Highlander Hybrid Limited
Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Tideland Prius, Jul 11, 2005.
Comments
Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Tideland Prius, Jul 11, 2005.