Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Cars with an efficiency equal to train
Monday, January 30, 2012
House transportation bill would spend about $260B
House Republicans are proposing to spend about $260 billion over the next 4 1/2 years on transportation programs, as well as substantially increase the size of trucks permitted on highways, according to a draft bill being introduced this week.
Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and other GOP leaders are expected to introduce the bill on Tuesday. Mica's committee is poised to approve the measure on Thursday.
Significant policy changes in the bill include giving states far greater power — and the U.S. Department of Transport far less say — over how federal transportation aid is spent. The bill also consolidates many existing transportation programs, and makes it easier and quicker for road construction and other transportation projects to meet the requirements of federal environmental laws.
States could permit trucks weighing up to 97,000 pounds — and in some cases as much as 126,000 pounds — on interstate highways under the bill. The current limit is 80,000 pounds in most states. Increased weight limits are supported by the trucking industry, but opposed by safety advocates.
"Larger and heavier trucks mean bigger safety risks for highway drivers," Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., wrote in a letter to House lawmakers last week asking them not to raise weight limits.
The bill would maintain current spending on transportation despite declining gasoline and diesel fuel taxes, which historically have paid for highway and transit programs.
A separate committee will decide how to cover the gap between gas-tax revenues and the spending levels proposed in the bill. GOP leaders have said they plan to use revenue from expanded oil and natural gas drilling, but haven't provided details. However, congressional aides knowledgeable about the proposal said it would include drilling off the Virginia coast and in federal leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The aides weren't authorized to speak publicly and asked not to be named.
The bill provides enough money to prevent the nation's roads, bridges and transit systems from falling further into disrepair, but not enough to significantly reduce the backlog of needed work on transportation infrastructure, transportation experts said. A congressionally mandated commission estimated in 2009 that it would require $200 billion a year to reduce the backlog while maintaining the current transportation system.
"Clearly this level of funding is inadequate to support our needs as a nation," said Joshua Schank, president of the Eno Center for Transportation, a Washington think tank that supports greater transportation investment.
But the bill is expected to save jobs in construction, bus manufacturing and other transportation-related industries in part because it allows state transportation departments to make long-term commitments of funds. Those kinds of commitments are usually necessary before companies can go forward with major new transportation projects.
Each $1 billion in transportation construction spending supports about 30,000 jobs, said Andy Herrmann, president of the American Society of Civil Engineers.
The GOP bill is "holding along the lines of what we've been doing in the past," he said.
But that may be enough to propel the bill through the House in an election year where voter regard for Congress is at rock bottom and lawmakers are eager to show off an accomplishment.
The last long-term transportation bill expired in 2009. Congress has kept transportation aid flowing to states through a series of short-term extensions. The current extension expires on March 31.
The Senate is working on its own bill, which would spend $109 billion over two years. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., a co-author of the bill, says the bill's sponsors have a plan to pay for the measure, but hasn't detailed how that would happen.
A bipartisan proposal introduced in the Senate on Monday would continue transit spending at current levels while giving the regulators greater safety oversight of transit agencies, including the power to impose fines. The Banking Committee is expected to approve the measure on Thursday, after which it will be incorporated into the Senate transportation bill.
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Thursday, December 16, 2010
Renault Set For January Sales Bonanza With 2011 New Car Range Price Reductions

Following the recent simplification of its car assortment, Renault has announced key model pricing with result from 4th January 2011, including the new 20% VAT rate. The welcome news for anyone with funds left after the celebratory period is that many of the best-sellers will be the identical price, or in many cases, substantially less than today, by up to £2,000.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Murano CrossCabriolet is no mad-cap fad

It’s called the Murano Cross-Cabriolet, which, if you feel about it, makes sense starting with the MPV, then the city car, the crossover, the folding hard-top and even the four door coupe – now you have the crossover convertible.
This is based on the four-wheel drive Murano. Nissan is claiming it will offer room for four adults, space for golf bags or luggage and a best leather interior.
And don’t think this is a madcap notion: Nissan insists the car will go on sale next year.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Nissan stops taking Leaf reservations, has 20,000 on the books

Nissan began taking reservations for the Leaf in May month.
The Leaf, which is about the range of a Nissan Versa, is powered by an 80-kilowatt electric motor that produces 107 hp and 206 lb-ft of torque. Nissan says the car's pinnacle speed is 90 mph.
The first Leaf deliveries in the United States are set to start in December. The first Leafs will be built in Japan. Nissan is expanding its meeting plant in Smyrna, Tenn., to assemble the Leaf there.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Toyota benefits from the spirit of modern adventure

The newest model is tasked with extending its appeal out of the green niche market and into the conventional. We tried a top spec T-Spirit model to assess its probability.
As you might imagine, there’s a enormous amount of technology at work in the car, making this possible and maximizing competence but to succeed, the Prius needs to incorporate that technology into a user-friendly package. It does a decent job. At 4,460mm long and 1,745mm wide, this Prius is a huge vehicle.
Rear legroom is good but the swooping roofline means anyone over six feet tall will move violently for headroom. The battery pack is located under the boot floor and this means that the baggage space available in is quite shallow but there’s plenty of length and a 445-litre capacity is far from stingy.
The headline figures with the newest Toyota Prius are its 72.4mpg combined cycle fuel financial system and 89g/km emissions.
Unlike a conservative, car the official economy events show the Prius giving similar returns in town and on the open road. The advanced power train adapts to the conditions.
Whether you can mimic these figures in real world driving is a diverse matter but there’s no doubt that the Prius is one of the most fuel and tax competent vehicles around.
The car can be set into ECO mode to enhance financial system or EV mode which uses electric power only for very small distances at low speeds.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Car Catches Fire in Proctoville Accident

It happened just after 8 a.m. on Irene highway in Proctorville, Ohio.
Dispatchers said one car caught flames and firefighters had to cut one person out of a vehicle.
Ohio State Highway Patrol, EMS, and the Union Township Fire Department responded to the car crash.
One woman was moved by EMS to a hospital.
The Ohio State Patrol is investigating the reason of the car crash.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Video: Aussie father clasps infant as car hits
The traffic mishap happened in the western Sydney suburb of Penrith in 2008 and was transmit for the first time Monday on Australia's Nine Network.
The security camera footage shows a car plowing into Andrew Leach as he held his son Hayden on a sidewalk close to a shop front. Leach's parents, standing close to, were hit, and the baby's empty stroller was knocked flying.
Leach held the baby to his upper body as he was pushed into the shop window and had his legs pinned by the car, which nine said was driven by an aged woman who had lost control of the vehicle.
As the car not interest down, Leach said he thought if they strike the back of me, break a leg or whatever, that's fixable. But if they strike my son, he's not fixable.
Leach said the program his son was unhurt.
Leach himself was shown climbing out from between the car and the shop front and was not poorly hurt. Both his parents were hospitalized with injury, but survived, Nine reported.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Anyone in chappals or lungi can be a Mercedes owner

Wilfried Aulbur, the auto company's managing director, said there was no way one could profile a person from his outward appearance as a potential Mercedes Benz customer.
In India, persons exhausting plain white shirt and pant or lungi and chappals can buy the car (Mercedes Benz), Aulbur told reporters, inaugurating a dealership close to Panaji.
Aulbur also said that lesser cities like Aurangabad, Bhubaneswar, Jaipur and Panaji were the next frontier for the luxury car makers.
We are looking at a 25 per cent expansion in these cities. There is a enormous wealth generation happening in India, he added.
Citing the example of Aurangabad, Aulbur said this Maharashtra city was an example of the changing and expansive lifestyle of lesser cities in India.
There is an order for 125 Mercedes Benz cars in Aurangabad. This shows the significance of such cities to us.
He said there were approximately 250 cars already on the roads in Goa, despite the fact that the state did not have a full-fledged dealership until currently.