Is There A More Gas-Effective Auto Than The Hybrid?

by Auto on September 22, 2009

With all of the cars that are on the market, you may be thinking that there should be a car you haven’t discovered yet. You’ve heard of convertibles, Mazdas, Fords, and Buicks. And, you being an well-informed car-buyer, know all about hybrid cars, too. But surely, you think to yourself, there should be a other fuel-efficient car than a hybrid. If simply you could find it.

This vehicle that you believe is more fuel-efficient than a hybrid car, must be hidden in the back of a dealership behind the red, green, and yellow cars. It should be stuck between a big SUV and a van somewhere. And what does it take to fuel this car? You don’t go through the answer to that question. You only just know if this class of car exists. But there just has to be something out there better than a hybrid car. You insist that it’s true.

Anyway, there are a few choices for you. You could be thinking that a very small conventional car is more fuel-efficient than a hybrid car. You could be thinking that an electric car is superior than a hybrid car. You can moreover be thinking that the dealership workers must have several cars in the back that they are creating on the spot that run on anything but gas and batteries. These cars, you imagine to yourself, would be improved buys than hybrid cars.

Anyway, electric cars don’t get better fuel-efficiency than hybrid car mainly because a lot of times electric cars don’t still require gas to power them, so you can’t even compare electric cars to hybrid cars. A small conventional is absolutely not more fuel-effective than a hybrid car for the reason that no conventional car is. And there are not one just-made cars sitting in the back anywhere. Car dealerships don’t make cars. They sell them.

However the definitive answer to the question is the new fuel-economy records that have been issued by the EPA. Those numbers conclude that the most fuel-efficient cars existing to the public when looking at 2009 models are hybrid cars. Now the Toyota Prius as an example has a combined freeway or metropolitan mileage of 46. This and other hybrid cars get overcome the 40 miles per gallon mark.

So, it looks like there are no new discoveries to be made at the auto dealer. And that’s a good thing. You wouldn’t want to be outdone by the Joneses as you thought you bought a great car, but you saw that they had a better, more fuel-efficient one. Nope, that’s not going to be you. Now you are armed with the facts that hybrid cars are the most fuel-efficient cars around and until automakers begin to come up with more ideas, a hybrid car is what you have to work with.

However, advancements in fuel-effective cars are on the horizon. Vehicle manufacturers are working on plug-in hybrids, battery-electric cars, and gas-engine systems that are more ecologically aware. So look out, your dream car is coming soon. But if for now, you just buy a hybrid, you won’t regret it.

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