By Megan Benoit on May 2, 2007

tahoehybrid.jpgThe hybrid hype has finally reached Detroit. This fall, the gi-normous GMT900-based GMC Yukon (a.k.a. the Chevrolet Tahoe) will offer optional dual-mode hybrid engine technology. Next year, Chrysler will follow suit with a hybrid Durango/Aspen. Both automakers promise 25 percent better mileage on the highway. Chrysler is claiming a 40 percent increase in the city. GM promises a 25 percent urban gain. Happy days are here again! You’ll soon be able to have your SUV and afford to drive it too! And cool the planet! Or, you know, not.

While the idea of a full-size hybrid SUV may send California’s Governator into a muscle flexing frenzy, one doesn’t have to read too carefully between the lines to see the abject futility of this venture. Let’s crunch a few numbers.

According to our friends over at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Yukon/Tahoe twins burn gas at the non-PC pace of one gallon every 16 miles in town, and once every 21 miles on the open road. Chrysler’s most efficient V8 uses gas at a buttock-clenching 14/19 mpg. 

To fix this sales sucking situation, GMC and Chrysler have equipped their big rigs with Prius-like (though proprietary) dual-mode hybrid technology. At low speeds and light loads, the hi-tech SUV’s can move forwards (or backwards) via electric power, internal combstion or some combination thereof. At high speeds or heavy loads (i.e. drag racing with a bass boat behind), the hybrid's batteries assist the engine. Add regenerative brakes and displacement-on-demand cylinder deactivation and away you go.

Surely all this ground-breaking technology will provide significant efficiency improvements and fuel cost savings. I don’t know about you but I’m thinking, what, mid to high 20’s? That kind of improvement might even give the SUV genre a new lease (five year loan?) on life. No sir.

For those of you who haven't done the math yet, the hybridified GM and DCX SUV’s are set to eke out a paltry 19-20mpg. And that’s city driving, where hybrids typically shine.

The enemy, of course, is weight. Just as you can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, you can’t turn a gas hog into silk pajamas (or something like that). Although GM is retrofitting the hybrid Yukahoe with aluminum components to compensate for 300 lbs. of batteries, it’s more or less a wash. The SUV’s will still weigh in at nearasdammit 5000 lbs. (or more depending on drivetrain).

Bottom line: a 25 percent improvement on not much ain’t a whole lot. But it is something, right?

“We have to think hard about the consumer who buys vehicles like the Dodge Durango and the Chrysler Aspen,” prevaricates Mark Chernoby, who’s just one letter away from having the world’s worst name for a VP of Advanced Vehicle Engineering. “These are people who want to have hauling capability.”

OK, but how many people who really need 8900 lbs. of towing capacity are gonna fork out a bunch more money for a vehicle offering few more mpg’s– especially when there's a lot full of heavily discounted non-hybrids lazing around?

Yes, here we go again: the “hybrid premium.” Forking out a couple of thousand bucks extra for hybrid tech has got to be pretty low on your average SUV buyer’s “to do” list. Buyers who previously owned full-sized SUV’s as status symbols (and got religion down at their local pump ‘n pay) have either left the genre already or can’t wait to do so. And any Chevy, GMC, Dodge or Chrysler dealer who thinks he’s going to see Prius drivers wheeling into his lot to trade-up to a hybrid SUV is plumb crazy.

It’s no surprise that the domestic automaker’s first serious hybrid offerings have arrived in SUV form. SUV’s are cheap to build, the factories and suppliers are already in place and they’re the automakers’ highest profit product. Besides, genuine clean sheet designs are extremely expensive and risky propositions. Better to stick with what you know. 

But American consumers will quickly see that boosting SUV gas mileage by 25 percent is nothing more than porcine lipstick application. If gas prices crest four bucks a gallon this summer, this insight will only require of femtosecond of consumer decision making. The odds that gas prices will trend downwards enough to lure large numbers of SUV buyers by the fall, when GMC unleashes their hybrids, are smaller than the Honda Fits, Nissan Versas, Toyota Yari and Chevrolet Aveos many of SUV refugees are now driving (no, really).

By the same token, Chrysler will enjoy the privilege of watching GMC fail to sell their hybrid Yukahoes before they open the gates on gas – electric Aspangos. Perhaps DCX (or whomever) will learn by example and not spend precious advertising and marketing resources on this ill-advised makeover. Maybe they’ll build a hybrid-powered 300C instead, to help revive that line’s flagging sales. Who knows? Maybe gas pigs can fly.

98 Comments on “GM and DCX Set to Sell Hybrid SUV’s: Big Woop...”


  • troonbop

    A femtosecond is one billionth of one millionth of a second.

    (Just thought I’d help out any other scientific illiterates.)

    Good article, Megan.

  • kps

    Don’t forget that miles per gallon is an inverse unit so comparing changes at different levels can be misleading; the ’same’ change makes more difference at the low end. For a fixed amount of driving, going from 16mpg to 19mpg (19% improvement) saves more gas than going from 35mpg to 50mpg (43% improvement).

  • rick sasko
    rjsasko

    Let’s say a driver averages 10,000 miles per year at 16mpg city is 625 gallons per year. At 19mpg its 526 gallons. 99 times $3 equals a 6yr 9 mo. payback for a $2000 initial outlay. Gas at $4 changes payback to 5 yrs. And that is worst case city driving. Highway would be 140%x21mpg=29.4mpg. 10,000/29.4=340gal 10,000/21=476gal 476-340=136 136×3=$408 $2000/408=4yrs 11mos payback. At $4 it would be 3yrs 8mos. Of course the payback will vary depending upon city/hwy driving, miles per year, and hybrid upgrade cost ( I am taking “a couple of thousand” as $2000.) Running the numbers it sure looks like at higher ($3 and above) it will be well worth it. So why the hostility? I would like to remind everyone who writes and/or reads this blog that there are MILLIONS of people who CANNOT sit in anything shorter than a FULL SIZE truck-based vehicle. PERIOD! Cars have had all of their headroom surgically removed so trucks are all that is left to choose from. Take your snark and apply it to all of the CARS that are supposedly so ROOMY and yet require tall drivers to recline to the horizontal to attempt to sit in the darn things. And by the way-6′0″ ain’t tall. 6′3″ and up is tall. Take your “full size” Avalons and Panther platform crap and the like and get real. They’re “mid-sized” because taller drivers need not apply. Don’t “fix” what ain’t broke! Full-size SUV’s are the only “cars” some of us have left to choose from.

  • Alex Rashev
    Alex Rashev

    kps – That’s true. Actually, parallel SUV hybrids, or better yet, pickup trucks, make sense, at least because of the wide powerband. Better than nothing.

    Like with diesels, it makes more sense on big cars than it does on small ones. Not that making small hybrids is bad, it’s just not as big of a change.

  • Joe Beckner
    Zarba

    Let’s say you own a 2005 Tahoe, and are enjoying around 14 mpg.

    Let’s also say you financed $35K for 72 months at 7.95%. You’d owe about $25K, with a trade-in value of about $22K. You’re $3k upside down right now, and that doesn’t factor in what happens to values if gas goes to $4/gal.

    If that new hybrid Tahoe costs an extra $2K, now you’re $5K down on the deal. Assuming a jump from 14 to 18 mpg, it would take about 6 years at $3.50/gal to cover that $5K.

    Since most people don’t keep cars that long, it’s a loser’s bet.

    Your mileage may vary.

  • Geotpf

    rjsasko-For anybody who says they can’t fit into a small car because they are too tall-I have two words for them:

    Scion xB.

  • Alex Rashev
    Alex Rashev

    Don’t forget, a hybrid will hold its value WAY better. Look at those diesel Jettas, they turned out to be a better investment because 5 years after the purchase, they’ll still return you the original difference between gas and TDI model, and then some. Or look at the 350SDL, those things still cost 10-12K, 17 years after being made :)

  • Geotpf

    I just looked up the head room for the Chevy Tahoe and the Scion xB.

    Scion xB: 46.1 inches
    Chevy Tahoe: 41.1 inches

  • ejl

    Zarba, I’m sure manufacturers are relying on big SUV buyers to look at this from an environmental perspective, not an economic one.

    O.k., maybe not.

  • Sajeev Mehta

    I’m betting on this horse too, considering I only got 22-23 mpg (mixed driving with the A/C on) in the Lexus GS Hybrid. The best I managed was 25mpg…not impressed at all.

    A hybrid, full-framed SUV is almost as nuts as marketing Crossovers as being the best of car and truck in one package.

  • Sid Vicious

    Seems like these things are the truck hybrid equivalent of the Accord hybrid. Instead of using the technology to really improve mileage, they’re using it as 1) Halo technology and 2) to gain bragging rights on maxmimum torque or towing capacity.

    In other words, why couldn’t they have put a V6 in these things (with cylinder deactivation) and put a bigger battery/electric motor to give equivalent-to-a-V8 acceleration. The electric system could help out with towing on hills, but not long mountain grades.

    I’m guessing the cost to do a truly unique hybrid system was too much to spend (as was mentioned in the article) and they simply couldn’t lower themselves to selling a V6 full size ute.

    These trucks (non-hybrid version) are meant to be open highway cruisers, off roaders, and towing machines. They are not good urban stop-go-runners where a full dual mode hybrid shines. Buy a Prius for that.

    Another waste of resources by Detroit.

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    rjsasko

    My dad is 6′3″. He has no trouble fitting into a Ford Focus. My Integra was a bit of a stretch, but he would manage it just for the fun of it. Oh, and he’s had 2 vertebra in his back fused. A friend of mine is 6′4″, he drives a 300M now, and previously has driven a Sable and a Bonneville w/ no problems. Check out a Vibe/Matrix, an xB, an Outback, or most modern hatches… they’re designed to have more head room. And a lot of them sit higher up (like the focus) so you don’t have to sit ‘down’ into them. So why the hostility towards cars? Even Shaq had his Lambo stretched to accomodate his substantial frame.

    Most of the people that ‘need’ trucks don’t really ‘need’ them at all. And many of them are realizing that need != want, and finding alternatives. My mom’s side of the family consists of about 90% farmers. They *need* trucks. And they use them. And they won’t get a hybrid truck, because they understand that the cheapest truck is the one you already own. You forgot to figure new vehicle payments on top of skyrocketing gas prices into your equation.

  • Joe Beckner
    Zarba

    rjsasko:

    I find it highly doubtful that the hybrid will get 29.4 mpg anywhere except parked with the engine off.

    While I tend to agree that anything that helps mpg is a good thing for these behemoths, you can bet that the hybrid premium will mostly drive consumers to more fuel efficient vehicles. After all, why buy a hybrid Tahoe when you can have an Acadia that gets better mileage?

    GM should be selling hybrids across the board and challenging Toyota to keep up. As it stands, they’re a few years late to the party and trying top sell green tech to people who don’t care about it. If you really use your Tahoe for towing, mpg is not the issue.

    Obviously, as gas prices rise the hybrid’s payback time shortens. The question is how much consumers are willing to bet on that when they buy a vehicle.

    Lastly, I’ll just throw in the question of relaibility. How many consumers want to be the first to buy a complex technology from GM? The diesels of the 70’s and the Cadillac V-8-6-4 debacle are still on some people’s minds.

  • Paul Scott
    NeonCat93

    @rjsasko – My friend is 6′9″ tall, and drives a Taurus. Back in the day, I even managed to squeeze him into my ‘79 Corolla. Comfortable? Oh, hell no. But, anyway, perhaps you should tone down the snark detector and take some deep, calming breaths – tall people tend to have more strokes and such, don’t they? YMMV

    Most of the people I see driving giant SUVs are tiny women… or maybe it is just the perspective…

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    Sid Vicious

    GM is using the dual hybrid technology already in city buses, where it *is* being put to good use and saving money/pollution. City buses put on enough miles, and use enough gas that the numbers makes sense. But SUVs? Get real. I wonder what the R&D premium was for the hybrid tech. It costs a lot more to put a hybrid engine in a vehicle than the $3k they’ll be tacking onto the Yukon, and I’m sure they think that they’ll recoup those dollars faster through SUV sales than car sales.

  • rick sasko
    rjsasko

    “I just looked up the headroom for the Chevy Tahoe and the Scion xB”: 41.1 vs. 46.1 for the xB. GET REAL! Tall people have these things called “legs” and this thing called a “spine” as well as “height”. This “spine” thingy will not fold in half (more than once) to get into and out of a vehicle. Those things called “legs” do not retract when driving vehicles sans leg room. They have to go somewhere. Of course removing the front seat and sitting in the back seat might provide that extra little bit of room to prevent knee/nose contact. It is absurdities like suggesting a Scion xB as a better alternative than a Tahoe for roominess that may explain how the average Joe on the street seems to be getting dumber by the minute.

  • SwatLax

    Megan, would you rather have GM and DCX stick their heads in the sand about the cause/effect relationship between oil/war/Al Gore and the decline in large vehicle sales? I don’t see how any other conclusion is possible from your argument.

    And no mention of Ford? How is it worse to offer a vehicle that gets better fuel economy?

    Even with high gas prices, there will still be a large market for large SUVs and, more importantly, pickup trucks. Developing a hybrid system that can work with a large truck apparently isn’t the easiest thing in the world to do – otherwise you can guarantee that Toyota would have beat them to it. So, yes, we should wonder why anyone would want to own an Aspen, hybrid powered or not, but don’t knock the companies for creating the most fuel efficient vehicles in their price range.

    “But how many people who need 8900 lbs of towing capacity are hankering for a few more mpg’s?” – I’m pretty sure the answer is every single one.

  • SuperAROD

    14/19 is the 4wd Durango/Aspen. The 2wd is 15/20. Add 40%/25% to those numbers and you have 21/25mpg. If I were Chrysler, I would put that 25mpg figure on every bit of advertising they have. It is going to be nothing but a positive for them.

    And since when do you have to “recoup your investment” when it comes to buying a hybrid? I thought the goal was to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gases. Prius owners paid a pretty steep premium to drive a jelly bean on wheels that would cost 15K if it were gas powered.

    If Toyota had announced the exact same thing, what a difference the response would be….

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    Scion xB front leg room: 40.7 in.
    Chevy Tahoe front leg room: 41.3 in.

    Enjoy that extra half-inch with your $3/gal gas. One of my old co-workers was about 6′4″ and he drove an xB quite comfortably. You want knee to nose contact? Try driving a Miata.

  • jl1280

    Here’s why it is a good move by GM. I need a full sized big truck to put my big old fat ass in. (And bithc stop telling me that I need to lose 150lb before Thanksgiving when you need to do the same) So the extra cash I save on gas can go to maintaining my physique. And then next time round I will still need a big full sized pick up for my continuing big old fat ass. And you thought GM didn’t know anything about its customers!

  • Mud

    Not IF but WHEN gas hits $4 per gallon.

    I’m very doubtful of any hybrid holding it’s value any better than it’s standard version twin. At the rate of what’s going on in hybrid technology, each model will be outdated just as quickly as any new phone/pc/gizmo that hits the market today.

    What would you pay for one of the first 2001 Prius models that came out? Maybe a better question is why you even buy one when the current crop has made considerable improvements.

  • rick sasko
    rjsasko

    FYI I was 6′3″ in elementary school…your dad is a piker height wise. Try being 6′7″ and sitting in those suggested alternative vehicles. Get real! You shorties have no d@mned idea how much havoc and problems you have created for taller drivers. Not only is the choice of vehicle to drive darn near zero but try excluding “catching a ride” with darn near anyone and forget taking a cab unless lying down in the back seat is your forte’. As for whomever has the friend who is 6′9″ and drives a Taurus God help his back when he gets older. I was just like him years ago. Folded myself into all kinds of autos. It will catch up with him sure as God made little green apples.

    When someone, somewhere makes a car that has legroom, headroom, ease of entry/exit, and affordability and dagnabbit STYLE you all can attack the full size suv/trucks. Until someone provides an actual REALISTIC alternative save the snark. Full size suv’s are all that is left that fit the bill.

    P.S. My hybrid payback numbers in a previous post are based upon numbers stated in the editorial. Your mileage may vary.

  • starlightmica (Richard Chen)
    starlightmica (Richard Chen)

    Good writeup, Megan – DC and GM are trying to make more money from the same old paradigm, milk the body-on-frame product line for all it’s worth.

    Tahoe does have more @$$-width vs. xB, 64.4in wide vs. 50.6 (subtract center console and divide by 2 for the real #). Sadly, that’s the dimension that many people need, not headroom and legroom where xB has it completely spanked.

    BTW, if you take CR’s pessimistic Durango 5.7 4WD test loop 12mpg (mixed) x 1.25 = a whopping 15mpg. Party on!

  • I think hybrid DOES make sense for large vehicles, such as pickup trucks, to help improve mileage when they’re not towing, which is most of the time.

    However, what counts is good execution. Here GM seems to be dropping the ball again. Toyota gets 40% real world mileage improvement out of their hybrids. So if GM gets only 25% they’re not going to be competitive. That’s assuming that all the manufacturers, with hard work, will be able to make the hybrid feature financially viable.

    Choosing between a Chevy Tahoe hybrid and a Toyota Highlander hybrid, which would you prefer?
    (the Chevy has 6,000 lbs towing capacity and the Toyota has 5,000 lbs towing capacity).

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    Chew on this — as long as you’re still burning gas, you’re still creating greenhouse gases. If you want to reduce your emissions and reduce your dependence on fossil fuels *and* get good gas mileage, get a turbo diesel. The newest diesels will even meet California’s emission requirements (Bluetec FTW).

    I’m not saying to not put hybrid tech in vehicles, I’m saying DO IT RIGHT. This hybrid V-8 nonsense is another nail in GM’s coffin. If they really were serious about saving the environment, they’d scrap all but a handful of their biggest gas-guzzlers, and put out their Trax concept as a real production car w/ a dual mode hybrid engine. If they really want to survive in today’s market, a hybrid Hemi is not the way to do it.

  • Stein Leikanger
    Stein X Leikanger

    Brick aeroplanes? Good idea … :-)

  • Frank Williams
    Frank Williams

    SuperAROD: If Toyota had announced the exact same thing, what a difference the response would be….

    Not on here. Go back and look at the reviews here for the Toyota Highlander and Lexus hybrids. None of them found rationale for the hybrid system in any of these vehicles – and in fact found them to be lacking in comparison with their gas-powered equivalents. (And many reviewers elsewhere questioned the logic of the hybrid implementation in these vehicles as well.)

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    Rjsako

    You’re the one that said, “6′3″ and up is tall.” We were merely providing data that 6′3″ can fit happily into most cars. Perhaps that’s another equation — lifetime fuel cost savings vs. lifetime chiropractor expenses.

    EJ

    Toyota uses different, better tech. And so does Ford. I wouldn’t mind getting an Escape hybrid myself, if I wasn’t addicted to fast cars. Maybe when I get old and fat…

    starlightmica

    Amen to that. Most of the people I know that drive trucks in the city do so to accommodate their girth more than their height. Bench seats and seatbelt extenders for everyone!

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    Thank you, Frank. Toyota is having an even harder time selling Highlanders than Priuses right now. I don’t know a single person that considered the hybrid Highlander/RX to be practical in any way, much the way people roundly dismissed the hybrid Accord. What’s the point of paying the premium for the hybrid tech when other vehicles in the same class, with the same power, get the same or better gas mileage?

  • Martin Albright
    Martin Albright

    Is it just me or does most of the Hybrid phenomenon seem like the triumph of marketing hype over facts? I’ve heard people use the term “hybrid” as though it was some sort of holy blessing, endowing a vehicle with an aura of Immaculate Combustion. Yet, the only thing good about hybrids is that they raise MPG – so if you can get the raised MPG without the hybrid technology, wouldn’t that be a solution as good as – or even better than – a hybrid?

    As hybrid-mania takes off, I expect we’ll see brisk sales of fake “hybrid” badges for people to slap on their cars the way tuners slap on fake “Type R” badges (”Wow! I didn’t know Dodge made a ‘type R’ Neon!”)

  • Ryan Beckham
    TheNatural

    Not everyone likes the shape of a Scion xB, therefore it is not an options. I have a tall family and I do alot of work around the house so I need room. Hatchbacks and the xB doesn’t accomidate 4×8 sheet of plywood. A Tahoe/Yukon supports all these options. Having a shut off engine at stop would be great for going back and forth to work in, since because of not “needings” but wanting the size of an SUV is nice. I could borrow a truck yes, but why?!

  • leighzbohns

    @SuperAROD:

    I thought the goal was to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gases.

    I think if you want to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gases, chosing a hybrid vehicle or any vehicle is probably the wrong way to go about it. You can reduce your impact by working close to where you live, by living in a smaller house, riding a bike or walking for errands and commuting, riding the bus instead of driving, walking, etc.

    Choosing a car which gets an additional 3MPG makes such a small carbon difference on your 80 mile round trip commute to your mc mansion than getting a flexcar for your once a week driving errands and using human powered transportation for the rest of it.

    I”m not saying that people should stop driving cars; There are many places, jobs, and lifestyles whih require individual vehicles for transportation. However, if you are that concerned about being environmentally friendly there are lifestyle choices you can make whch will have a drastic and immediate effect on your carbon output. My car is pretty inefficient, but I own it outright, pay little for insurance, and the relative inefficiency is balanced out by the fact I drive it 20 miles a week or so, compared to people I know who drive their cars 40 miles a day.

    A hybrid makes sense if you have to drive, are concerned about appearances, and want to save a little at the pump, but it does not make any more sense than a smaller, lighter car.

  • Stein Leikanger
    Stein X Leikanger

    The problem here is the deceiving “have your cake and eat it too” ethics of these offerings. “Save the environment (or fuel) while driving as fast (or heavy) as you want” doesn’t parse.
    I have a lot more respect for the light-weight, truly fuel efficient vehicle that has performance characteristics, than for bricks on wheels fitted out with “hybrid” engines. It’s just lousy engineering.

    Here’s a bit of interesting engineering, conventional and efficient:

    Alfa Romeo 159 Sportwagon, 2,4l, 20 valve diesel engine.
    200bhp@4000 rpm
    295 lb ft@2000 rpm
    Top speed 140 mph
    Fuel efficiency: Town: 30.1 mpg/Out of town: 50.4 mpg
    C02: 184g/km

    I’m 6′4″ – the seats in the back fold down – and it’s fun to drive … :-)

    BTW – GM paid good money to Fiat to avoid having to transfer the Alfa technology to any GM product.

    I used to buy Jeeps with solid towing capacity (three of them in a row). Must be a slow learner, as it took me years to realize that out of a full year’s driving I would use that hook maybe six-seven times.

    For work professionals the situation is a different one – but the solution suggested here isn’t even worthy of being called a stopgap.

  • starlightmica (Richard Chen)
    starlightmica (Richard Chen)

    Martin Albright:

    Here you go, official GM Hybrid decals:
    http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Official-GM-Hybrid-Decal-and-Stickers_W0QQcmdZViewItemQQcategoryZ50446QQihZ003QQitemZ130092577804QQrdZ1QQsspagenameZWD1V

  • SuperAROD

    Toyota has not done a good job of marketing the Highlander. Supposedly 31MPG should be a big selling point, even though we are talking a smaller class of vehicle with only a 5000 lb towing capacity.

    But you underestimate the impact the GM/DCX 2 mode is going to have.

    An Aspen/Durango with 335 HP, 9000 lb towing capacity, seating for 8 AND 21/25 MPG to boot? I would say good enough to increase sales of the Durango platform by 25%, minimum. The 6600 sold last month turns into 8500 with the hybrid. Easily.

  • Scott s
    yournamehere

    another interesting xB fact, there is more rear leg room then in a BMW 7.

  • bfg9k

    # SuperAROD:
    May 2nd, 2007 at 3:35 pm

    An Aspen/Durango with 335 HP, 9000 lb towing capacity, seating for 8 AND 21/25 MPG to boot? I would say good enough to increase sales of the Durango platform by 25%, minimum. The 6600 sold last month turns into 8500 with the hybrid. Easily.

    I’m going to go out on a limb here and claim that towing capacity is utterly irrelevant to the vast majority of SUV buyers. Furthermore, I’m going to claim that the average car, which can tow in the vicinity of 1000-1500 lbs, has a tow capability that’ll cover the vast majority of American towing needs.

    So, increasing tow capacity on the Aspen isn’t going to cause a huge increase in sales. SUV’s appeal lies in three things: the ability to see under the car to look for attackers, the ability to see over traffic, and the envy induced in one’s neighbors who also want an SUV. Reason #3 is fading – the market perception of SUVs is changing and smaller (i.e. CUV’s) are coming into vogue. Reasons #1 and #2 are the biggest reasons why women, who drive most car purchase descisions, want SUVs (look it up, this is a well-established fact).

    $4 gas and 20 mpg city when your neighbor is happy in their Fit getting 33 mpg city and waving their extra cash in your face makes a hybrid Aspen/Tahoe/other tank irrelevant.

    Sure they’ll sell some, sure it’s good to increase mileage, but this is wasted effoprt on the part of DCX and GM. They need to put these drivetrains in Malibus, Sebrings, and Astras instead.

  • Armando Muir
    quasimondo

    leighzbohns,

    In a perfect world, absent of other outside factors, moving closer to where you live and getting a smaller house would be a nifty idea. Unfortunately, in most major metropolitan areas, the closer your house is to the city, the more expensive it is, and unlike cars where the price is generally determined by the vehicle’s size, the size of a house bears no impact on what it will cost. In most cases, moving to the city to save a few dollars in your morning commute, while shelling out much more in mortgage and property taxes, while subjecting your children to overcrowded schools and a substandard education that plagues many public school districts of urban areas, and putting up with lower air quality, higher crime, and other things that make suburban life attractive while living in a tiny house simply makes no sense.

    McMansion or not, it’s just cheaper to move away from the city. A longer commute in many people’s mind is a reasonable sacrifice for a higher quality of living.

    A more realistic solution would be to make your home more energy effieicent and look for commuting alternatives like commuter railways and vanpools.

  • michael deskevich
    miked

    For changes as small as 25%, it’s not worth the added complexity. Here’s my rationale: My daily driver is a jacked up ‘89 Toyota 4Runner on oversized tires (not the smartest choice for a daily driver, but I’ll pay more for fuel to be happy). On my daily commute (60% city under 25MPH and 40% Highway above 50MPH) I average around 23MPG (corrected for the large tires). For an 18 year old truck with 260,000 miles, I think that’s pretty darn good. Now, if I drive like a jackass I’ll get about 16MPG which is a ~30% drop in milage! As gas prices have risen my jackass level has dropped and I’m much more conservative on my accelerations and lane changes and all of that. So, if I can save ~30% in milage just by being smarter when I drive, why can’t anyone else. Why pay extra for a complex hybrid when you can just be smarter? (And driving like a jackass doesn’t save you much time – for me it saves less than 5 minutes on a 17 mile commute). Just yesterday on my drive home, there was someone in a Jeep Grand Cherokee weaving in and out of traffic and jumping on the throttle and brake all the time, and she pulled into my neighborhood about 2 car lengths ahead of me. Just calm down, lower your blood pressure, and save some money!

  • Stein Leikanger
    Stein X Leikanger

    @Miked

    For changes as small as 25%, it’s not worth the added complexity.

    Precisely!

  • Hippo

    A technologically advanced hybrid from a company known for reliability and good service is one thing.

    The same from the 2.5 famouos mostly for their dismal dealer service.

    Right sucka !!!!

    In 30 years of working with the auto industry the one thing that always amazed me was watching dealer techs diagnosing the most simple electrical problems by tearing cars apart.
    It took them 20 years to get up to speed diagnosing modern engine management and working with aluminum parts.
    And people expect to get these things fixed at a time where the techs coming into the industry at dealer level are semi illiterate because the pay is so low.

    People need to realize that when it comes to repairing things cultures have a huge inertia, some of the better euro and japanese companies have used advanced technology for much longer, being more profitable they can have the pick of the litter when it comes to techs and don’t need to squeeze the last drop of blood out of a customer because they know they will be there tomorrow.

    And yet a few people will go for it, with 7 year loans. LOL.

  • Megan Benoit
    Megan Benoit

    SUV’s appeal lies in three things: the ability to see under the car to look for attackers

    Oh my God, that kills me. Absolutely slays me. Because if an attacker can cram themselves under my 5.6″ ground clearance GTI, then well, I’ll have to concede. “But honey, I *have* to get the lowering kit for my car! Otherwise an anorexic midget attacker might get me!” I would wager that most attackers can only even fit under SUVs and other large vehicles.

    As for point 2, that is a good point, but the expanded view advantage is quickly offset by the tiny parking spaces disadvantage. And given how most women park (and drive)… well, maybe there should be a test before women are allowed to get SUVs…

    Point 3 is the most rapidly diminishing of all now that the Prius (or RX-400, for those with the dosh) is the new status symbol. Hybrids are politically correct, no matter how impractical.

  • Jason
    confused1096

    To give my .02 on the tall drivers debate:
    I’m 6′3 and a big guy. I can drive Foci (we have these little toys as company cars), Scion xBs (nice little cars), and New Beetles for around town commuting okay. But if I’m going to spend any degree of time in a car or carry passengers–like say my wife and 3 kids they just ain’t a realistic option. Too cramped and too uncomfortable. I’ve owned Sentras and Escorts as well, even a Fiero briefly (shudder). Again the discomfort is too much to pay for the fuel savings. I’ll eat the increased gas cost for not feeling like I need a chiropractor after a one hour car ride. Personally I’m most comfortable in a large car or a full sized truck. I can’t imagine getting rid of my Crown Vic and cramming myself in a Focus for a savings of $30-40 a month.

  • Scott Jackson
    Mj0lnir

    Look- if any of the people who bought Tahoe’s and Durango’s bothered to do the math they wouldn’t have purchased it in the first place.

    That means that all the arguments about payback time and maximized interior space and towing capacity mean absolutely zero.

    That also means that GM/DCX will probably sell more of these things next year than they did this year.

    The people driving these things and walking onto the sales lot aren’t going to hear about a Yaris would really fit their lifestyle better.

    They’re going to hear about how they can get the same vehicle they had last year, but now it get’s 25% better mileage.

    Rationality doesn’t enter into it.

    If it did, they’d all be driving Sienna’s.

  • sdwinfla

    I haven’t seen mention of this yet, but if someone already covered it, I apologize up front.

    Even the EPA acknowledges that their mileage numbers are overly optimistic; deduct somewhere between 10-30% to get a more “real world” estimate.

    So, if I deduct 20% from the current GM/EPA estimate and then add 25% back on for the hybrid “advantage”, I’m back pretty much were I started, give or take.

    At the same time, I have the cost of a new truck that carries the additional hybrid premium of $2000-$3000 without any real hybrid advantage.

    (Note that I am arithmetically challenged, so feel free to argue over my math.)

  • Hippo

    PS, I tell you right now what is going to kill these hybrids.

    They are better then the flex fuel vehicles that 99% of people just use on gas, but not all that much.

    The big deal with them is that solo drivers can use the HOV lanes, and getting ahead quicker makes them feel superior.
    As soon as they sell enough hybrids and other politically enhanced alternative power train vehicles to slow down the HOV lanes to the same speed as the general traffic there are going to be a bunch of suckers stuck with these things out of warranty and upside down.

    I’m all for economy and conservation, but the way to do it is like in Europe and Japan. Image over substance will only take you so far, even in the US.

  • Alex Rashev
    Alex Rashev

    Amen.

    For all the super-tall, extra-wide people who NEED an SUV to lug your own self around…

    Minivan is the answer.

    Hell, in a straight line, those things are even faster than most sporty cars these days.

    And why not? It’s the same thing, only without the lift kit and 1000 pounds’ worth of frame. More spacious, too.

    I always thought that Prius looked like a mini-Sienna. Maybe they should connect the dots and make Sienna a hybrid, too.

  • leighzbohns

    @quasimondo

    Yes, I agree with you that there is a rational argument for living in the ‘burbs and driving to work somewhere else, and driving somewhere else for recreation. If your options are limited by where you are and what you value, then things like hybrid cars and solar powered roof tiles begin to make sense.

    It’s possible that with higher energy costs there will be an impetus for more affordable housing in city, that with less flight to the suburbs there will be more pressure and more tax dollars for schools to become better, but I’m not holding my breath that this will happen any time soon.

    Yes, in a perfect world everyone could live close to work, and walk, and visit their local farmers for fresh produce and yet have a big house and good schools, but in this world most people get to choose among those.

    It’s like the engineers dilemma: Fast, Cheap, or good. Pick any two.

  • Chris
    carguy

    I don’t understand the attraction to hybrid cars – it seems like an overly complex engineering effort for only modest gain. While any gain is good, if you are going to all the trouble of having both an electric and combustion engine you could probably do much better by adopting the model used by diesel-electric locomotives where the combustion engine is only used to charge batteries which in turn are used to propel the train via electric motors.

    Combustion engines are only anywhere near efficient when running at constant RPM and the hybrid technology does not solve that problem. How about a diesel turbo engine running at a constant speed charging a capacitor/battery that then are used to drive the vehicle via electric motors?

    It would be a cheap design as the engine only has to be designed to run at one speed and no gearbox is required. It would also allow the car to produce significant power and torque over short periods of time (for those like the traffic light Grand Prix). It also makes all-wheel drive very easy and allows for all sorts of new car designs as the combustion engine can be placed anywhere in the vehicle.

    Instead we get hybrids which do little but make some people feel less guilty (or smugly superior) about driving their car. Lets get a real solution please.

  • Sean Goldstein
    SherbornSean

    I have nothing to add to the argument over xB head and legroom, except to note that the xB is being replaced by a shorter model, with less headroom. Also, I seriously doubt that people considering a Tahoe are also looking at a Scion.

    As far as the hybrid goes, I don’t get the opposition. At $3 per gallon and 12,000 miles per annum, you would save $600 annually by moving from 14 mpg to 18 mpg. So if the hybid premium is less than $5,000, it looks like a good move for consumers and for GM/DCX.

    What’s the problem?


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