How Hybrid Car Works
The auto industry has been abuzz about the developments and
introduction of new technologies for as long as it's been around. The
big new of this decade is the introduction of the Hybrid car. It's not
quite the electric machine everyone thought we'd be driving by now, but
it's halfway there and it's a good solid step in that direction. But
what exactly goes on under that slick new hood that makes these cars so
special?
The science is a bit stuffy, but the basics are simple enough. It's
not even new technology necessarily. Buses and trains have been running
with the help of electricity for years, but now it's a consumer
product, something you and I can go out and pick up from the car lot
and drive around town.
Electric cars have a lot of drawbacks. They're hard to maintain,
harder to charge up, and don't go nearly as far as you'd like, and we
all know the drawbacks of the gasoline powered machines we drive around
now. The mixture of the two is an attempt to cut back on car emissions and gas mileage while not falling victim to the pitfalls of electric cars.
Basically, with hybrid cars
you're bypassing the negatives of both sides. You still run your car on
gasoline, but now it takes half as much and instead of the gasoline
powering your car directly, it powers the batteries and generator that
do most of the actual work.
If you brake or release the accelerator, the generator takes and
stores energy from the motion in the car's motor, putting it back in
the batteries and recycling it into the all powerful energy that will
propel your car forward. It sounds complicated but it's really a matter
of inserting a middle man between gasoline and your car that doesn't
pollute or deplete as you use it.
The fact that you're still using gasoline is a necessity at this
point as it would take a 1000 pound battery to emit as much energy as 1
gallon of gasoline. Gasoline is still an amazing formula capable of
storing vast amounts of energy. Until a suitable alternative can be
found and refined to the degree needed to operate a motor vehicle in
our high powered, quick moving world, the hybrid is the scientific
equivalent of a godsend. Our only other alternative is walking, or to
start breaking the laws of physics.
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