http://teslaclubsweden.se/test-drive-of-a-petrol-car/

Having heard so much good about petrol cars, we decided to test drive one. They 
are said to combine cheap price with long range and fast charging. A winning 
formula on paper – but how are they in real life?

We sat us in the loaner car at the car salesman’s office. Automakers do not 
sell the cars themselves, only through independent car repair shops as 
middlemen. It may sound like a bad omen to buy the car from a car repair shop 
that you want to visit as seldom as possible. But you apparently can’t buy the 
car directly from the manufacturer but must go through such intermediaries. The 
seller was very ”pushy” and tried to convince us to buy the car very forcibly, 
but the experience is perhaps better elsewhere.

So we sat in the car and pressed the START button. The car’s gasoline engine 
coughed to life and started to operate. One could hear the engine’s sound and 
the car’s whole body vibrated as if something was broken, but the seller 
assured us that everything was as it should. The car actually has an electric 
motor and a microscopically small battery, but they are only used to start the 
petrol engine – the electric motor does not drive the wheels. The petrol engine 
then uses a tank full of gasoline, a fossil liquid, to propel the car by 
exploding small drops of it. It is apparently the small explosions that you 
hear and feel when the engine is running.

The petrol engine consists of literally hundreds of moving parts that must have 
tolerance of hundredths of a millimeter to function. We begun to understand why 
it is car repair shops that sell the cars – they might hope for something to 
break in the car that they can mend?

We put in a gear and drove away with a jerk. The jerk came not from any extreme 
acceleration, but gasoline engines apparently cannot be driven as smoothly as 
electric motors. The acceleration did not occur at all, because we could not 
get the car to go faster than 40 km/h! By then the petrol engine literally 
howled and the whole car shook violently. Convinced that something must have 
broken we stopped the car. The seller then explained that with petrol engines 
you need to ”change gears” on a regular basis. Between the engine and the 
wheels are not a fixed ratio gear, but a variable one. The petrol engine can 
produce power only in a limited speed range, and must therefore be geared with 
different ratios in order to continue to accelerate. There are 5 different 
gears we can select with increasing speed as result. It is -as we learned 
quickly- very important that each time select a suitable gear otherwise the 
engine will either stop or get seriously damaged! You need a lot of training to 
learn to select the right gear at the right time – though there are also models 
with automatic transmissions that can do this themselves. In the manual 
transmission car, we needed to constantly guard the engine from damaging it. 
Very stressful.

We asked if the constant sound of the engine -that frankly disturbed us from 
being able to listen to the radio- could be turned off. But it couldn’t. Very 
distracting.

After getting the car up to speed through intricate changing of gears we 
approached a traffic light. Releasing the accelerator pedal resulted in no 
significant braking, we had to use the brake pedal very much to slow down the 
car. We were surprised to hear the brakes are completely mechanical! The only 
thing they generate is heat – braking gives no regeneration of gasoline back 
into the tank! Sounds like a huge waste, but it would soon get even worse.

When we came to a stop the engine continued to run and the car vibrate – even 
though the car was standing still! The engine continued to burn gasoline 
without moving the car forward. Can it really be true? Yes, the seller 
explained, it is so with gasoline cars: the engine is always running and 
burning gasoline – even when the car is stationary. Some models however 
switches off the engine at a red light, he explained. Well that certainly makes 
more sense.

After a while we came to a gas station where we could charge the car. The car 
claimed that it still had half a tank left, but we wanted to try the famous 
super-fast charging of petrol cars!

So we drove to the gas station and opened the fuel cap. The filling nozzle is 
very similar to a charging connector, but it is not electrons that come out of 
it but gasoline. Gasoline is a highly carcinogenic, smelly and flammable liquid 
derived from plants and animals extinct since millions of years ago. The 
gasoline is pumped to a tank in the car, which then drives around with about 50 
liters of this hazardous liquid in it.

We put the nozzle to the car, but nothing happened. The seller then explained 
that we must pay to fuel! Much like those extremely expensive fast chargers 
some electric utility companies have set up. After we put the credit card in 
the reader we could start fueling. It was extremely fast! In just two minutes 
we filled the gas tank to the max! But there were two counters on the pump: one 
that showed the number of liters we have fueled and one that showed how much it 
would cost us. And that counter was spinning so fast that we could hardly keep 
up with its pace! Sure we filled the tank full in two minutes, but it did cost 
us an unbelievable €30! A full charge would thus cost us double that – a 
whopping €60! We cursed our luck that we apparently have chosen one of the most 
expensive gas stations, and began to ask the seller what other alternatives are 
there? How much does it cost to fill up at home, and how many free stations are 
there?

The seller looked very puzzled at us and explained that it is not possible to 
refuel gasoline cars at home, and there are no free gas stations. We tried to 
explain our questions, in case he had misunderstood, but he insisted that you 
can not. Apparently youhave to several times a month drive to the gas station 
to recharge your petrol car at extortionate prices – there are no alternatives! 
We thought it was very strange that no gasoline car manufacturers have launched 
their own free gas stations?

There are no gas stations either where you can fill up more slowly at a cheaper 
price. We started calculating price versus consumption and came to the shocking 
conclusion that a petrol car costs unimaginable €12 per 100km! Sure, electric 
cars could also theoretically come up to these amounts if they quick charged at 
one of the most expensive charging stations in the country – but for petrol 
cars there are no cheaper alternatives! While electric cars are comfortably 
charged at home every night for €2 per 100km petrol cars must make detours 
several times a month to fill up at these extortionate rates – without 
exception! Monthly cost for a petrol car can -just for the gasoline alone- 
easily exceed one hundred Euros! We begun to understand why they are so cheap 
to purchase – operating them is extremely expensive instead.

We also begun to understand why there must be so many petrol stations 
everywhere, if all petrol cars always have to drive to them to refuel. Imagine 
if you could charge your electric car only at the power companies’ most 
expensive fast chargers – and nowhere else!

With this in mind we ended up in a traffic jam and was horrified that the 
gasoline engine continued to burn these expensive gasoline drops even when the 
car was standing still or moving very little. With gasoline vehicles it is easy 
to run into cost anxiety – the feeling that the car literally burns up your 
money! No cheap home charging and no regeneration of gasoline back to the fuel 
tank when braking sounds like economic madness – especially given that all 
gasoline must be imported from abroad.

We returned the car to the dealer’s premises, pulled the handbrake and step out 
of the car. The petrol engine continued to run! Apparently one must manually 
switch off the combustion of the precious liquid. But we wanted to see the 
petrol engine, so the seller opened the bonnet. The entire front portion of the 
car was completely cluttered with hoses, fittings, fluid reservoirs, and amid 
all a huge shaking cast iron block which apparently constituted the motor’s 
frame. There was no space for luggage in the front of the car! Despite its 
enormous size, high noise and vibration, the engine barely delivered one 
hundred horsepower. The engine was also extremely hot, we burned ourselves when 
we touched it. Even though this was on a warm summer day so the engine did not 
need to generate heat to the passenger compartment.

We became also worried about what would happen if we crashed with a petrol car? 
The cast iron block that occupied most of the engine compartment was sitting in 
the middle of the collision zone! Where would it go if we collided – would we 
get it in our lap? The salesman assured us that the motor in such case somehow 
gets folded down under the car but we could not escape the impression that the 
engine block was very much in the way at the front – the safety beams were 
built around it, which surely impairs their functionality. Avoiding that one 
hundred kilo iron lump in the front of the car makes it so much easier to build 
safe cars. In addition, we have seen on the Internet hundreds of pictures and 
videos of burning gasoline cars. The petrol tank apparently often leaks after 
an accident so the flammable liquid pours out and becomes ignited!

From the engine, under the car runs an exhaust system – a kind of chimney for 
engine exhausts. When you burn the carcinogenic gasoline a lots of noxious 
gases are produced. The car cleans away the most dangerous gases, but what 
remains is released into the open air behind the car. It is still unhealthy to 
breathe in – and smells very bad! And petrol cars are allowed to emit these 
harmful gases in the middle of our cities? Do not confuse petrol cars’ exhaust 
pipes with fuel cell cars’ – while hydrogen powered fuel cell vehicles emit 
only water vapor gasoline cars spew out noxious gasses, and even fossil carbon 
dioxide that contribute to Earth’s future-catastrophic warming!

We thanked the seller for the display, shook our heads and gave back the 
ignition key (yes, it’s called that) to him. He realized that there would be no 
business for him so except for one lame attempt he did not try to sell us the 
car any more.

On the way home in our electric car we looked with completely different eyes at 
our poor fellow commuters, who still had to put up with their gasoline cars. 
But soon it will be their turn to trade up, too!


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