June 18, 2013

What will really power the automobiles of 2022?

What will power the cars of tomorrow? Of all the competing alternative fuel technologies from today – which will have emerged – or be well on the way to emerging – as the standout success story, if any?

History has shown us that the best technologies will usually come out ahead – but by no means always. Vested interests sometimes have the marketing muscle to win out, no matter what the technological nuances. The most obvious example of fairly recent history is perhaps the vs. VHS battle. We all know which won, but people in the know generally agree it wasn’t the technically best version.

So all sorts of factors come into play – but the non-technical ones are mainly monetary concerns.

What seems certain is that automobiles will gradually become eco cars. At all the world’s major motor shows, which typically showcase cars that are anywhere between three to five years away from production, the technological focus is very much on hybrid and electrical motoring technology.

There are other competing fuels such as hydrogen, alcohol/ethanol, which are all competing for supremacy, but on-board electrical power (whether partial or whole) seems, gradually, to be winning the race.

The problem with electricity in relation to automobiles, though, has always been one of portability. You really need a cable (impossible) or a giant leap forward in battery technology for this to be really earthshaking. It hasn’t happened yet in one fell swoop, but seems to be getting there incrementally.

But it will also take an infrastructural shift (and corresponding shifts in government and other public policy around the developed world) to make easy recharging a reality – without the giant technological leap that has been thus far lacking.

All eyes are really on Honda here. Honda has, more than any other single carmaker, pioneered alternative drive technology. So far, the company has a finger in all-electric, ethanol, and hybrid drives. But it’s the latter that looks most likely to win out – with an ever-increasing electrical percentage contribution to the liquid fuel (of whatever type) unless the scientists really achieve that portable electrical power paradigm shift.

The ninth generation Civic….for how long?

One of the most popular cars ever produced by Japanese car manufacturer is now in its ninth generation.  The civic 2012 is available in either five or seven different models, depending on whether you class the Si Sedan and Sedan and the Si Coupe and Coupe as individual models or not. Added to the Sedan and Coupe, there are the Hybrid, the HF and the Natural Gas. So Civic fans across the States will be able to choose the engine and fuel type that suits their own particular style of driving best.

Honda has focused on a series of small changes to improve upon the outgoing models rather than a huge overhaul of the exterior and interior. So while the Honda Civic remains easily recognizable as such, purchasers get more value for money, especially in terms of fuel efficiency.

The Honda HF has a gasoline engine that can achieve 41 miles per gallon. That makes it comparable with the Honda Civic Hybrid, which gets 44 miles per gallon, thanks to a combination of a lithium-ion battery and a 1.5 litre i-VTEC gasoline engine. The 2012 Hybrid’s fuel efficiency is an improvement on the 40/43 mpg on the outgoing model.

Environmentally-aware drivers can choose between the HF, the Hybrid and the Natural Gas – which has won the Green Car Journal’s accolade Green Car of the Year 2012.

For those of you contemplating buying a Civic though, the latest news is that another revamped Civic will be coming at the end of the 2012, so you may want to hold fire and see what the tenth generation will be like.

Apparently, the early changes to the 2012 version are in reaction to the motoring press’ tepid interest to the ninth generation, although American Honda President Tetsuo Iwamura has said it’s just Honda’s game plan to stay ahead of the competition.