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Showing posts from November, 2015

Consumer Reports isn't giving all-electric cars and climate change a lot of attention

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Honda will be the next automaker to market an all-electric car as Toyota continues to sit on the sidelines. -- HACKENSACK, N.J. By VICTOR E. SASSON EDITOR Consumer Reports seems to have a blind spot for all-electric cars. The magazine's annual Auto Issue, just out, picks the 10 best new cars for 2017, but all of them use gasoline. For a full report, see: Consumer Reports smells (of gasoline)

Consumer Reports calls Land Rover Discovery Sport one of year's worst

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Consumer Reports names only four vehicles to its "Worst Cars of 2015" list, and the Land Rover Discovery Sport is one of them. By VICTOR E. SASSON EDITOR How can you resist buying an SUV called the Disco? That's how Consumer Reports magazine refers to the Land Rover Discovery Sport, which is on its short list of "Worst Cars of 2015." Other "worst cars" are the Chrysler 200, Kia Sedona and Lexus NX 200t/300h. "Its engine seems flat-footed and the transmission often feels in the wrong gear," the magazine's editors say of the Disco. It gets worse:  "Handling is lumbering, and the wheels ride as though made of concrete. The infotainment system seems dated." The magazine's October 2015 issue notes, "Shoppers covet this eccentric English SUV brand for vanity reasons.... The Disco belongs to a family that includes the stately Range Rover." The 2015 model started at $37,070. Free lunch Just a week ago, Jaguar Land Rover No

A heavenly marriage: Solar shining on the roof, Tesla Model S charging in the garage

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COMING UP FOR AIR: On Nov. 4, my all-electric Tesla Model S made its first visit to a gas station since I drove it home in mid-April to fill the Michelin tires with air -- 45 psi all around. FREE ELECTRICITY: Charging my Model S at home costs me nothing, because I have more than 60 solar panels on the roof. By VICTOR E. SASSON EDITOR My electric bill this month is exactly $2.43, a reduction from about $6 the month before. With more than 60 solar panels on the roof of my home, charging my Tesla Model S costs me nothing. In the past two months, the solar panels generated pretty much all of the electricity I needed to run appliances and lights, as well as charge the Model S crouching in the garage. Unfortunately, I still have to choke on the fumes from huge SUVs and other vehicles that use fossil fuels, including those filthy, diesel-powered Volkswagens, Audis and Porsches. OPEN WIDE: The hatchback in the Model S comes in handy at the hardware store or supermarket.

Jaguar Land Rover lays out big lunch, promises green cars in less than 5 years

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Joe Eberhardt, right, president and CEO of Jaguar Land Rover North America, answering questions from Scotty Reiss, president of the International Motor Press Association, after a lunch in midtown Manhattan on Thursday. By VICTOR E. SASSON EDITOR When I was a newspaper reporter covering auto importers based in northern New Jersey, Jaguar's luxury sedans and powerful sports cars were known as unreliable. In fact, I recall writing a business story about Jaguar, based then in Leonia, identifying the car as the most accurate winter thermometer ever -- it would start at 33 degrees, but not below that temperature. That was 30 years ago, but Jaguar Land Rover CEO Joe Eberhardt said on Wednesday the perception of unreliability still dogs the British marque. That may be why Jaguar and Land Rover vehicles sell in such small numbers in the United States -- fewer than 68,000 units so far in 2015. On Wednesday, Eberhardt bought a big lunch for 60 members of the International Motor Press Associat

Chevy Volt sales flop, VW diesel owners get crumbs, Mercedes controls from hell

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A 2015 Chevrolet Volt, the plug-in gas-electric hybrid the news media insists on calling an electric car. By VICTOR E. SASSON EDITOR What's all the shouting about? Since 2011, Chevrolet has delivered about 85,000 Volt plug-in gas-electric hybrids in the United States and about 5,000 more in Canada. That sounds like a sales flop to me, not a cause for celebration. You'd have to add in sales in Europe and Australia through October to reach the 100,000-car milestone marked by the Gas2 blog and other media. No one is saying how many hundreds of thousands of gallons of fossil fuel those cars burned or measuring how much pollution they poured into the atmosphere. For a real success story, you have to look at Toyota, which sold more than 200,000 Prius gas-electric hybrids in each of the last three years. From 2000 through December 2014, the Japanese automaker delivered nearly 1.5 million hybrids in the U.S. alone. The Volt, including the redesigned 2016 model, represents the continuin