January 5, 200719 yr Diesel Replacing Hybrid in Next Accord Honda president Takeo Fukui has been quoted in the Japanese press as saying that a next generation V-6 diesel will be commercialized by Honda, and is set to slot into the Ridgeline along with other unspecified models. First, though, Honda will kick off with its 2.2-2.4-litre class, four-cylinder “super clean” turbodiesel that’ll run in the next Stateside Accord, appearing around 2009. This is expected be a breakthrough engine, with emissions as clean as clean as a modern gasoline powerplant, able to meet even the toughest regulations in the world (i.e. the EPA’s Tier II Bin 5 regulations). Winding Road
January 5, 200719 yr Part of this cleanliness I'm guessing came from the change in diesel fuels this year.
January 5, 200719 yr GM needs to take note of this, though I'm guessing a hybrid goes over better with consumers than a diesel anyways.
January 5, 200719 yr as long as you can burn BIODiesel without voiding the warranty :sign0200: Edited January 5, 200719 yr by Oldsmoboi
January 5, 200719 yr Good. Better than their aimless Hybrid Accord and much better than any Toyota hybrid.
January 5, 200719 yr Good. Better than their aimless Hybrid Accord and much better than any Toyota hybrid. Cheaper too no doubt.
January 5, 200719 yr Part of this cleanliness I'm guessing came from the change in diesel fuels this year. The new catalytic converter probably plays the biggest role in making this clean diesel possible. This catalytic converter features the world's first innovative system using the reductive reaction of ammonia generated within the catalytic converter to "detoxify" nitrogen oxide (NOx) by turning it into harmless nitrogen (N2). Link
January 5, 200719 yr The new catalytic converter probably plays the biggest role in making this clean diesel possible. Link Good stuff. In regards to cleanliness, what cars on the road today are at near-zero emissions? It'd be good to have a laundry list for the purposes of this thread.
January 5, 200719 yr hopefully this will be nice... take some load off the gasoline to lower prices!!! HAHAHAHA as long as you can burn BIODiesel without voiding the warranty :sign0200:actually, any "Renewable Diesel"... we'll need alot more of it by 2010 because of GM, Ford, Honda, and anyone else that comes to the party!
January 5, 200719 yr Good stuff. In regards to cleanliness, what cars on the road today are at near-zero emissions? It'd be good to have a laundry list for the purposes of this thread. Go to our own GM Economy and Efficiency Guide to see what GM vehicles are SULEV.
January 6, 200719 yr Good stuff. In regards to cleanliness, what cars on the road today are at near-zero emissions? It'd be good to have a laundry list for the purposes of this thread. MY2006 PZEV cars: BMW 325i Ford Escape Hybrid Ford Fusion (I4) Honda Accord Hybrid Honda Civic Hybrid Hyundai Elantra Kia Spectra Mazda 3 Mazda 6 (I4) Mercedes-Benz E350 Mercury Mariner Hybrid Mercury Milan (I4) Nissan Altima 2.5 Subaru Legacy 2.5i Subaru Outback 2.5i Toyota Camry (I4) Toyota Prius VW Rabbit VW Jetta 2.5 VW Beetle 2.5 Volvo V70 2.4
January 6, 200719 yr Cheaper too no doubt. Doubt it. Honda's IMA is comparatively mild. A simple BAS-like system with the diesel would still do wonders for idling in traffic. Edited January 6, 200719 yr by empowah
January 6, 200719 yr Doubt it. Honda's IMA is comparatively mild. A simple BAS-like system with the diesel would still do wonders for idling in traffic. I see. A any rate this is still something Honda can make a great niche with. While diesels are common in Europe they've been slow to catch on stateside. Honda may yet pierce teh market and get some real popularity with this model. It's quite a bold move...I guess it's a slogan they should be flying instead of Ford
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.