Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Ask Joe Mechanic - Diesel Engine Vehicles (Part 4)

            We have now pretty much covered the workings and the advantages and concerns about diesel engine vehicles. The only things remaining are why they are so poorly accepted in the USA compared to the rest of the world and also what are the current and future diesel engine vehicles that are available to us.

            In the United States, diesels presently account for only about three percent of the personal transportation vehicles on the road today. In Europe, the average is about 50 percent, with France having the highest total at about 70 percent diesels. Germany is about 50 percent, which includes almost all police cars and taxis, while England rates about 38 percent. If diesels rate so much better fuel economy and engine longevity, what is the reason for this disparity? Actually, the reasons are many, and there is enough blame to cover almost everyone. From government regulations to US automakers mistakes and indifference to public perceptions and misinformation, there is much fault to find.

            The first subject is government regulations. In Europe, the governments encourage the use of diesel by taxing diesel fuel is taxed at a rate of about one half what gasoline is taxed. In the United States, federal fuel tax is 18.4 cents per gallon on gasoline while it is 24.4 cents on diesel. Also, our government subsidizes the making of ethanol despite the fuel’s terrible economics and its impact on the environment as a whole (ethanol takes a great deal of energy to produce which contributes to greenhouse gases and global warming), and also requires extensive modifications to the engine and fuel system to allow its use. On the other hand, biodiesel can be better for the environment, requires much less energy to create, utilizes food waste to produce, and also requires little or no modification to a diesel engine to use. Biodiesel is also carbon neutral, which appeals to environmentally conscious consumers.

            As far as other environmental impacts, while it is true that diesels emit more particulates per gallon burned than gasoline does, there is something skewed in the way the government calculates it. If one vehicle emits 1 percent noxious oxides into the environment and another emits 1.5 percent, which is better for the environment? Clearly the one emitting 1.5 percent if it achieved twice the mileage of the other! But the government does not see it that way. Everything works by proportion, so a thrifty Toyota Corolla is judge by the same standard as a gas hog Cadillac or even worse a heavy duty GMC Yukon, which is still considered better than a VW Jetta TDI.
           
And, while we are familiar with the fleet average mileage law, there is also a much lesser known fleet average emissions law. This is why almost every year Volkswagen runs out of turbo-diesels part way through the year. And in some states such as California, New York, Massachusetts and Maine, they have even more stringent regulations. In California, there is a regulation on the number of one-ton diesel vehicles allowed to be sold each year. For this reason, in California, you do not find Dodge offering diesels in anything except its high profit Ram trucks. And, even though it is powered by a small, highly fuel efficient diesel, the Freightliner Sprinter was delayed a year being introduced into those states because it was a diesel only vehicle, unlike Dodge which had gas and diesel versions and came to market a year sooner.

            The second reason is the US automakers. As we have already seen, in certain places, vehicles are released based on profit margin only. In Europe, Dodge sells diesel-powered caravans, which amount to between 75 and 80 percent of European Caravan sales. Dodge also released diesel powered Neons and PT Cruisers for the European market.  Another factor is that US automakers have always charged a substantially higher price for a comparably equipped diesel powered vehicle. This, combined with the higher diesel fuel price has discouraged the American public from spending the extra dollars.
           
But, probably the biggest problem created by the manufacturers, which affected the sale of diesels in the United States, occurred during the first oil crisis in the 1970s.
Several manufacturers, most notably General Motors in an attempt to rush diesels into the US market, converted gasoline engines into diesels without strengthening the engine block to handle the much higher compression. The engines were very unreliable and basically at times blew up without warning, sometimes with very low mileage on them. These, combined with the fact that these older diesels were very sluggish on performance, smoked, and were very noisy; left a very bad taste in the American car buying publics’ mouth toward diesel engines.
           
Many of the public perceptions of diesels, noise, smoke; vibration, poor acceleration and cost have been addressed with the newest generations of diesels. Better balancing and injection systems have lessened the noise and vibration. Smoke and smell have pretty much been eliminated with the new ultra low sulfur fuels. Poor acceleration has been eliminated by new cylinder head designs, fuel injection improvements and turbocharging. And many manufacturers have eliminated the surcharge for a diesel or at least reduced it to a reasonable amount.
            While for years, Mercedes Benz, Volkswagen and a few other small companies were the only ones offering diesel powered vehicles in the United States; there are now quite a few choices available in many different size and types of vehicles. And, very soon, Ford, General Motors and Chrysler will be offering diesels in the domestic marketplace.

            I personally can attest to the strength and reliability of diesel engines. I grew up around diesels as my father has driven them since the late 1950’s. He had a number of 170, 180, 190, and 240 Mercedes Diesels along with a few Peugeot 504s. His 1953 Mercedes 170DS was actually in the Guinness Book of World Records with the highest documented mileage vehicle in the world in 1979 and 1980. His Mercedes had 844,000 miles on it, and basically we did all the work on the car at home. We rebuilt the transmission or engine, replaced head gaskets or whatever work was required to keep it on the road. My father worked in Philadelphia for 14 years and commuted every day, for one 14-month period working seven days a week. There were times on extremely cold winter days, that for fear of not being able to start the car when he came out of work, he would lock the car and let it idle all day. The only times he would take the car to the shop was for state inspections or to the dealer each time it turned another 100,000 so that it could be duly noted. In addition to the mileage awards he received from Mercedes for this car, they also recognized him for 1,500,000 combined miles on his various Mercedes. Mercedes actually took the engine and transmission from his car and sent them back to Germany where the training school rebuilt and restored them for him. Also, when I traveled to Germany in 1980 while they went there for vacation, my father and I received a personally guided tour of the Mercedes Museum by its Curator, in spite of fact that the Museum was closed at the time.

No comments:

Post a Comment