Mike,
The industry is looking into lots of possible solutions.
The Electric Cars or fuel cells or Natural Gas or solar or ..., etc, are considered strong hybrids.
The IC (* Internal Combustion *) Engine and some other source combined gives you the Mild Hybrid.
I had a work associate who had one of the Honda hybrids. The car worked just great ... until the first sensor failure around 20k miles. The vehicle dropped from 40+ MPG down to 19-22 MPG. No matter what was done with this vehicle it would migrate to this failed state.
These systems are very complicated, and as in complicated systems, they tend to have issues, until they become common systems.
Hybrids save on emissions at the tail pipe. And Save on Gasoline costs. This helps with inner city areas and heavy traffic zones.
The issues with Electric cars are the electricity. Where does it come from. Most of the energy in the USA comes from the bruning of Sulfur contaminated coal. This causes more emissions at the factory smoke stacks then the equal burning of gasoline to power the same vehicles. As this may help cities like LA or Detroit, or Oakland, it does not help the global ecology. It is not the right direction. Electricity also requires a recharge and therfore special equipment, you have limited range, and limited recharge capabilities. The recharge locations can be modified, yet the range cannot at this time. Also, unfortunately one of the best ways to store this energy are lead batteries, which require special handling and disposal. Once again not the right thing for the ecology. Also, in castrophic accidents, the acid now comes into play for damage to the occupants.
The issue with Natural is the range and refill locations. Like I Said the refill can be fixed, yet the range is no way going to match that of conventional IC engines today. Also there is the issue of explosion in accidents. It is Natural Gas.
Solar has the issues of storing the energy as well, Batteries (* Issues from above as well *), and also the lack of sunny days. The range is even less then those mentioned before.
Fuel Cells are a promissing alternative. The only problem is that like fusion for many years it took more energy to be put into the reaction then you get out of it. Yet, the research does look promising, and I am not talking about cold fusion either.
I expect that the mild hybrids will be much more popular and will be seen in the near future (* 3 to 5 years *). These hybrids will combine electric engines and IC engines in various designs. Unfortunately, I am not able to discuss more at this time.
Be excited, and watchful, of the new technology.
I recently sold my 1993 Grand Am that got 23-25 MPG and had a 3300 cc 90 Deg V6 with a three speed transmission. People would ask me why I bought my 2000 Firebird with the 3800 90 Deg V6 with a 5 Speed Manual Transmission. The same driving I woudl get 27-29 MPG. If I drove it nice I could get 26 out of my 93, and I get 31 out of 2000. Also note that the 93 was under older emission standards, and the 2000 was an early ultra low emission vehicle, which got GM Emission credits for building a sports car at this emission level. I recently bough a 2003 Z71 4x4 SLT Extended Cab Short Bed half ton truck. I get from 16 MPG to 18 MPG. Running in 4x4 causes you to lose about 1 to 2 MPG also.
Talk to you later.
:asian: