Why Diesel Cars Are Disappearing

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  • čas přidán 21. 06. 2020
  • Today, diesel engines are known to be heavy-duty, hardworking engines, most commonly found in heavy machinery. But their reputation for being fuel efficient made them a once popular choice for cars across parts of the world. Then the case for diesel seemed to crash in the 90s, when global health authorities determined diesel to be carcinogenic.
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    Why Diesel Cars Are Disappearing
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 6K

  • @toddstidham8374
    @toddstidham8374 Před 3 lety +1202

    Fun fact, Rudolph Diesel originally designed the engine for farmers to run on vegetable oil or coal dust, two fuels that farmers would normally already have on the farm, and as far as vegetable oil, could even produce themselves.

    • @RichardASK
      @RichardASK Před 3 lety +115

      Older diesels can easily run on used UK Chipshop oil. You can smell them.

    • @arcanondrum6543
      @arcanondrum6543 Před 3 lety +143

      More "fun" facts: 1. Bio - diesel has fewer harmful emissions. 2. _(edited)_ Rudolph Diesel died under mysterious circumstances. 3. After his death, Standard Oil named a filthy petroleum distillation "Diesel Fuel". 4. _(edited)_ Though Water is literally a molecule of two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom, Oil Companies insisted that Fuel Cell Cars (that's : Electric Cars with a Fuel Cell instead of a Battery) get their hydrogen from cracking Natural Gas to get Hydrogen. By the way, how DO you extract the Hydrogen Atoms from Water? You "Crack it" by running electricity through water *(HELLO Green Energy Storage Method!).*
      In other words, the stank of the greed of oil companies may end most life on Earth if you believe in Climate Change, as I do. There are still people in jail for smoking a drug not sold by a pharmaceutical or a tobacco company but the greedy stank pigs still have their freedom, many of them not paying their share of Taxes.
      *See? I promised you "fun".*
      .

    • @someguy9520
      @someguy9520 Před 3 lety +46

      He actually ran his first working prototype on peanut oil of all things

    • @pierceyu4546
      @pierceyu4546 Před 3 lety +26

      My cousin who once drove a diesel suv would top it off with cooking oil and it would still run!

    • @someguy9520
      @someguy9520 Před 3 lety +31

      @@pierceyu4546 thats nothing new. there is a huge community that reuses old frying oil for diesel fuel. If you fillter it down to like 5 micron, you could use it in pretty much any diesel engine. though mixing it with regular diesel is a good idea, since pure oil tends to be thicker, therefore more strain on the fuelpump and worse fuel atomaziation

  • @trollmctrollface7450
    @trollmctrollface7450 Před 4 lety +1832

    The background music isn't loud enough! I almost heard someone talking in the video!

  • @bradrenfrew2749
    @bradrenfrew2749 Před 2 lety +482

    As a diesel tech and someone who is very involved with the diesel trade, it boggles my mind why there hasn't been more research into tiny 2 cylinder diesel hybrids in cars. It would be small enough to not produce much emissions and be hands down the cleanest and most efficient thing on the road

    • @bradrenfrew2749
      @bradrenfrew2749 Před 2 lety +21

      @Retired Bore not in regards to small diesel engines. A 2-3 cylinder Kubota will weigh more then a gas engine of equal size but the efficiency is still leaps ahead of gas engine. And plus in those hp ratings it sint required to be in t4f. This are engines used to power small diesel generators that run at constant load for insane hours on end. Plus the weight isn't that much greater tbh. The use much lighter parts on those baby diesels. I can pick one up off of the ground by myself. Diesel hybrid has entered equipment more prominently recently and already it shows how absolutely amazing it is. The noise is the only thing with those that are noisy but even then new mini diesel gens in rv have also become very quiet. It's very easily durable. But I know the biggest kicker is would be too expensive

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 2 lety +1

      Ist go bad diesel, bad diesel then take it to the diesel pond. Next bad gas engine, bad gas engine & take that to the pond.
      Well I guess I need to move to country side and get a Tennessee walking horse. Oh and just how do think you can go cross country on a horse relying completely on that 1 horsepower transportation? You can not. Yep you have to get on a freeway.
      And you don't have enough horsepower.

    • @turboflush
      @turboflush Před 2 lety +11

      Gas = hp. Diesel = tq.
      Electric = tq.
      Hybrids use the electric to get moving then gas takes over with the hp curve.
      Thus why diesel not used.

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 2 lety +5

      @@turboflush Diesels are heavier, noisier and more expensive to make. Don't fit well in FWD configurations if the diesel has enough HP to move the SUV up hills at the speed desired say on New Mexico freeways. The low temperature starting problem and gelling of the fuel also does not lead to a turn key situation either. But mostly: If it breaks a nail. Requires paying attention to gauges. It won't sell. Besides that diesels are smelly. But not if you are burning used McDonalds frying oil.

    • @adrianvasile4683
      @adrianvasile4683 Před 2 lety +2

      Because of the DPF which is very expensive and the gain doesn't justify the cost.

  • @tristanclark7795
    @tristanclark7795 Před 2 lety +156

    lol the dude talking about all semis and long haulers going electric as soon as late 2020s is more than extremely optimistic haha

    • @iiceman2431
      @iiceman2431 Před 2 lety

      True that

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 Před 2 lety +4

      Why. All of the technology already exists with electric motors, storage batteries for off grid, and overhead tram wires either completely or on certain stretches in-motion charging for long distances.
      Logistics companies that adapt will be at an advantage, while ones that don’t will no longer be profitable. And just like steam locomotives disappeared, so will diesel trucks.

    • @mercury6765
      @mercury6765 Před 2 lety +15

      @@Bartonovich52 who is going to fund the investment in overhead tram-like infrastructure? Will take a long time for electric trucks to be the norm. There’s not even one on the market yet, the Tesla truck hasn’t launched yet.

    • @francisbarnett320
      @francisbarnett320 Před 2 lety +12

      @@Bartonovich52 But you haven't calculated where you 're going to get the power to run the trucks, and the tractors, and the harvesters.
      Diesel is dead? You are away with the fairies.

    • @geoben1810
      @geoben1810 Před 2 lety

      @@mercury6765
      Consider how fast aircraft technology advanced in the 10 years after Kittyhawk. And everyone said it wouldn't fly. Now stop playing with your mommy's computer and go play in traffic with your little zombie friends! 🤣

  • @somervillearron
    @somervillearron Před 4 lety +1077

    the thing is i wonder how many car companies have cheated emmisions tests in both petrol and diesel cars without being caught?

    • @SlingSalsa
      @SlingSalsa Před 4 lety +54

      LOL, cheating, no manfuacturer of anything is going to spend a dime more per unit than is absolutely necessary. The smoke point for diesels is 18:1 AFR, 19:1 AFR makes the best power, but no manufacturer spends for adequate plumbing on any vehicle gas or diesel. This is a classic example of another type of revolving door: mfg refuses to tune anything outside of stoich (15:1 AFR for diesels), it runs dirty, they dont care so whats mandated? Emission controls that do not properly function in external environments as well as the internal environment of such a realm of operation. Parts mfg's win, the automaker wins, green swastika can continue its uninterrupted totalitarian march of lies and mischief, but you lose especially if you don't know any better. When you realize we are not allowed to have long lasting fuel sipping and super mechanical and thermally efficient technologies, because they would not have the fat of the land under their arses and in their pockets otherwise. The amount of intentionally designed throw-away technologies is mind-boggling, I mean how else would they be able to perpetually rob us all blind over 'waste', all the while gaslighting the tech that is a known functional quality while intentionally making it turn noses away en masse. This is how things are taken away, classic collective punishment.

    • @michaelgayle3463
      @michaelgayle3463 Před 4 lety +1

      @@SlingSalsabb. B b bbbbb

    • @aaronstone6183
      @aaronstone6183 Před 4 lety +10

      More than you've seen on TV.

    • @matrix2678
      @matrix2678 Před 4 lety +2

      they need some bs to sell advancement

    • @Paul-gz5dp
      @Paul-gz5dp Před 4 lety +34

      Most of them. It is easy to program computers to do anything including change votes that people cast on electronic voting machines.

  • @opalyankaBG
    @opalyankaBG Před 4 lety +1722

    So, they're not really disappearing.

    • @randomkoreanguy
      @randomkoreanguy Před 4 lety +118

      For trucks and other work vehicles vital to our infrastructure, there just isn't a viable replacement. As much as Tesla's and other manufacturer's electric trucks will change the landscape to some degree, there's many cases in the US where it's still impractical to employ electric vehicles due to the vast distances that have to be crossed with little to no infrastructure to support electrification.

    • @jericoba
      @jericoba Před 4 lety +40

      @@randomkoreanguy So far. Electrification is going to overtake one day. Watch your back, diesel.

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 Před 4 lety +34

      randomkoreanguy I think infrastructure is the least of problems for electric trucks. While buses and garbage trucks don’t have to haul 80000 lbs, long haul trucks do. And for electric trucks to compare to diesel trucks, their truck and trailer weight would have to increase due to their batteries. Not only that how do you power a reefer by electricity only? Plus, how would an electric truck go on a 6 percent grade? They would get stuck uphill

    • @je.m3320
      @je.m3320 Před 4 lety +27

      @@randomkoreanguy for cars it will be easy but for trucks it is going to be a longer time because of bigger infrastucture

    • @fdect
      @fdect Před 4 lety +32

      Diesel light cars are probably going to disappear pretty soon (in less than 10 years)... trucks, long haul or heavy duty vehicles are not going to disappear any time soon, at least until there isn't a more energy dense battery system.

  • @anthonydilligaf823
    @anthonydilligaf823 Před 2 lety +65

    I loved my VW TDI/IDI's
    ..and manual transmissions.
    Great vehicles.

    • @Gr1m3d4wg
      @Gr1m3d4wg Před 2 lety

      So sad. Are you ok buddy? I am here for you if you need me.

    • @RahulBiker
      @RahulBiker Před rokem

      😞😞😞😞

  • @abhisheksavant4307
    @abhisheksavant4307 Před 3 lety +355

    Imagine Electric car companies screwing up your car battery performance with a software update. Like they do with smart phones 😂

    • @Project153
      @Project153 Před 2 lety +20

      @Generic JC Denton pic Planned obsolescence.

    • @aimlessparasite1289
      @aimlessparasite1289 Před 2 lety +29

      Already do that by burying simple bits like spark plugs deep in the engine under headers and they make you remove the entire front clip and headlight to change a bulb... That wire hanging down that gets corroded? That fold of metal that fills up with dirt behind the fenders.. That's all planned. Ive seen floods of phones all get a software update that kills battery life or charging ability overnight as a tech more than once. They don't want you to own a car for a long time and its going to get worse. I want nothing to do with an infotainment system and the electrical nightmares those will be in a few years.

    • @nicoj3660
      @nicoj3660 Před 2 lety +11

      The usual Republican conspiracies and scare tactics.

    • @aimlessparasite1289
      @aimlessparasite1289 Před 2 lety +44

      @@nicoj3660 Except its not a theory.. Apple has been sued a few times over it.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 Před 2 lety +7

      And planned obsolescence started 100 years ago at General Motors.
      Yawn.. _NEXT!_

  • @AlgoCurioso4
    @AlgoCurioso4 Před 3 lety +1680

    I wish the background music was higher. I hate to hear people talking in videos.

  • @TheSlimCognito
    @TheSlimCognito Před 3 lety +272

    I had an 89 vw jetta turbo diesel and when I got it, that thing failed emissions by a larger margin. So I grounded the car and converted it to biodiesel myself. I had it tested again about a year later and the lady couldn't believe it. The lowest emissions she had ever seen on a diesel engine. She tested it 3 times and even called someone else out with a different tester who tested it several times and it passed with flying colors every single time. Diesels originally used plant based oil when they were released but big oil personally made sure they wouldn't stay like that.

    • @andrewsang4688
      @andrewsang4688 Před 2 lety +35

      Think about how much fast food Americans eat. How much oil is used every single day to fry that. Imagine filtering all of that and powering vehicles with it. And theoretically, it would be carbon neutral because the plants which created the vegetables used to create those oils were made from carbon dioxide in the air

    • @thepurdychannel8866
      @thepurdychannel8866 Před 2 lety +13

      @@andrewsang4688 yes diesel fuel is a light oil originaly diesel engines ran on peanut oil

    • @boxoffisa
      @boxoffisa Před 2 lety +2

      @@thepurdychannel8866 peanut oil? Lmao.

    • @HailNjord
      @HailNjord Před 2 lety +7

      I've heard a story of a guy that was able to get as much used cooking oil from a restaurant that he wanted. He would fill up his truck weekly with it. He had to replace the $15 fuel filter weekly but that was much cheaper than paying at the pump.

    • @thepurdychannel8866
      @thepurdychannel8866 Před 2 lety +8

      @@HailNjord you are supposed to filter the oil first with a sieve or some sort of fine mesh filter to get the bits of food from it

  • @cliffowens3629
    @cliffowens3629 Před 3 lety +83

    Had a diesel pickup from Isuzu for 20+years. Love it and drove it till the timing chain snapped. By then it was rusting out, but 40+ mpg in city and 50+ mpg on the highway was something I don't see anywhere else in any car company. Named it Ruth after the white dragon of the Pern series.

    • @PistonAvatarGuy
      @PistonAvatarGuy Před 2 lety

      Diesels are only efficient when they're polluting like mad.

    • @davidanderson8469
      @davidanderson8469 Před 2 lety

      Those things rattled, vibrated and smoked like a banshee under load but were pretty reliable. I almost bought a non-turbo one but the test drive convinced me it was not for me. My buddy only got 22 mpg with a sizable camper shell on back. He got 32 mpg before the shell.

    • @theincrediblehulk5797
      @theincrediblehulk5797 Před rokem

      Holy moly I’m more surprised that you know about the dragons of pern series, I once found that book in my dads collection and I thought it was a forgotten series

    • @jonuno
      @jonuno Před 8 měsíci

      What model and year

    • @Ilikepie18855
      @Ilikepie18855 Před 3 měsíci

      what was the mileage when it finally died?

  • @Fulmynato
    @Fulmynato Před 2 lety +82

    10:00 "diesel is common in public transport" and shows a German electric train

    • @throwaway692
      @throwaway692 Před 2 lety +3

      Never heard of a diesel electric?

    • @Fulmynato
      @Fulmynato Před 2 lety +8

      @@throwaway692 yes, I heard of diesel-electric, but the one in the clip is a German ICE train, which isn't diesel-electric, it's electric.

    • @throwaway692
      @throwaway692 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Fulmynato Fair enough. LOL!

    • @johnsergei
      @johnsergei Před 2 lety

      @@throwaway692 It's what most diesel locomotives are, the diesel generates electricity, which then powers traction moters.

    • @johnsergei
      @johnsergei Před 2 lety

      How to move?. You must be talking HST
      The British HST trains were the = 2/3 fastest trains in the 1970s & could = or beat the acceleration of most electric loco hauled trains. @ the time EMU sets were not common on long distence services.

  • @raulbila46
    @raulbila46 Před 3 lety +949

    plot twist: it won't disappear

    • @curtisducati
      @curtisducati Před 3 lety +22

      Never ever ! Petrol same price as Diesel at the pump ????

    • @curtisducati
      @curtisducati Před 3 lety +18

      @@vablo7198 I jst came back from a long trip in my new estate , was doing 55 mpg all the way , great cars ! Diesel are so much better than petrol , Finland is high for petrol ?

    • @efandmk3382
      @efandmk3382 Před 3 lety +11

      Not completely. Just for personal vehicle use. It will be reserved for commercial use.

    • @THESLlCK
      @THESLlCK Před 3 lety +11

      @@efandmk3382 no it won't, they will never die

    • @sayedali8051
      @sayedali8051 Před 3 lety +6

      Turbo charged diesel engine is better

  • @patricklondon6006
    @patricklondon6006 Před 4 lety +502

    When diesel engines were catching on in the USA. The oil companies raised the price of diesel fuel around 30% above the price of gas.

    • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
      @AdamSmith-gs2dv Před 4 lety +69

      No that was government not oil companies, the government mandated ultra low sulfur diesel around 2008 and producing ultra low sulfur diesel costs more thus the price increase

    • @lthundertree6385
      @lthundertree6385 Před 4 lety +24

      @@AdamSmith-gs2dv
      So basically it was the pollution costs of diesel, and refusing to hide that by dumping it on the public at large, that drove the price?
      P.S. In truth a huge factor in the change in relative prices was driven by the shift in demand vs gasoline. There is a natural balance of gasoline vs diesel coming out of crude oil. In the decades past refineries had to put a lot of effort into pushing away from that natural balance towards gasoline production, so diesel prices were naturally lower per energy cost. When balance of the demand switched away from gasoline towards diesel, for a number of reasons, this wasn't so much the case. So the $ per Kj cost of the fuels (remember that diesel has more energy in it per gallon) came much closer to equal.

    • @paulwilliams2024
      @paulwilliams2024 Před 4 lety +12

      Patrick London No the government causes the raise in prices of diesel

    • @scottgordon1781
      @scottgordon1781 Před 4 lety +25

      The government in South Africa did the same thing with the diesel price. It used to be way cheaper than petrol. Then they just added more tax to make it similar in cost to petrol.

    • @peterdaniel66
      @peterdaniel66 Před 4 lety +17

      even though it costs a LOT less to make..

  • @sharkracer
    @sharkracer Před 2 lety +153

    I've been driving gasoline cars all my life, since the late 80s. I just bought my first diesel, one of the last "super"diesel cars available, a 380 hp 75 torque BMW 5 series, and it's been tuned to 440/85. This thing is absolutely wonderful. I plan on driving it for at least 10 years.

    • @soundterrorist256
      @soundterrorist256 Před 2 lety +12

      85 torque? Do you have trouble getting moving?

    • @sharkracer
      @sharkracer Před 2 lety +32

      @@soundterrorist256 I live in Korea where we calculate torque in Kg.m. Equivalent in pound-ft would be 614 torque.

    • @ctdieselnut
      @ctdieselnut Před 2 lety +1

      That sounds like a awesome machine. A solid, well made, quiet, comfortable riding luxury car that is also fast and gets great mileage. It's like the best at everything! My bro has a 2010 5 series, and the straight 6 gas 3l isn't fast whatsoever. 600 ft lbs would definitely wake it up.

    • @FeldwebelWolfenstool
      @FeldwebelWolfenstool Před 2 lety +26

      BMW? 10 years? I wish you luck.

    • @sharkracer
      @sharkracer Před 2 lety +5

      @@FeldwebelWolfenstool You wanna know what my other car is? A 95 E34 540i/6. I've been driving that for the past 9 years, and I've spent less on upkeep than any new car that I've had previous to that. Go figure, huh? And the diesel 3 liter has been around for over 10 years now and is known to be a pretty stout and reliable engine. But, what do I know...

  • @alistairshanks5099
    @alistairshanks5099 Před 2 lety +51

    The development of diesel engines into the modern units you find in passenger cars today has come at another cost to one of their strengths, lack of complexity or more to-the-point reliability. Fully mechanically controlled diesel engines would run forever if properly maintained and you did not need a Ph.D. in electronic diagnostics to service or fix them. The humble Mercedes 123 series of the 70s and 80s when used as a taxi with the four-cylinder and five-cylinder diesel would return one million kilometers regularly before overhaul. Many would go even further and the London Taxi fleet had similar data using Perkins mechanical diesel. I commonly see diesel vehicles of less than ten years of age being scrapped because the repair costs make it not worth fixing and it is all the electronic and pollution wizardry that makes it so coupled with building the engines ever lighter and less robust.

    • @david124773
      @david124773 Před 7 měsíci

      But is that true for gasoline engines as well?

    • @The_Wanderer...
      @The_Wanderer... Před 7 měsíci

      Well, that was impressive until I found out how much 1M kilometers was, Toyota tundra has reached 1.6M kilometers twice, once with absolutely nothing but maintenance and the second time with a transmission replacement and maintenance

    • @seb_1504
      @seb_1504 Před měsícem

      ​@@The_Wanderer...Except a Greek Mercedes Diesel did 3 or 5 million kilometers and take into account diesel engines regularly hit the 900,000 mark compared to gasoline vehicles.

    • @The_Wanderer...
      @The_Wanderer... Před měsícem

      @@seb_1504 not without TLC

  • @charonstyxferryman
    @charonstyxferryman Před 3 lety +57

    Apart from outboards, diesel engines are exclusively used in marine vessels due to avoiding petrol's explosive fumes, and larger carbon monoxide emissions.

    • @bingosunnoon9341
      @bingosunnoon9341 Před 3 lety +1

      You should compare gasoline to diesel by weight, not by volume. You get different results.

    • @Federico0
      @Federico0 Před 2 lety +1

      *in the US

    • @TheAmericanCatholic
      @TheAmericanCatholic Před rokem

      Large marine vessels my dads 1960s boat has a two stroke gas engine

  •  Před 4 lety +342

    What about Vin Diesel?

    • @sssssneaker
      @sssssneaker Před 4 lety +33

      You can find Vin in the lower right part of your windscreen

    • @Yoshbros0619
      @Yoshbros0619 Před 4 lety +45

      He already mention a name change from vin diesel to vin electric

    • @cancel.lgbtq.6892
      @cancel.lgbtq.6892 Před 4 lety +5

      Couldn't understand the mumbling's king. I need subtitle when he talks.

    • @drock5407
      @drock5407 Před 4 lety +17

      He pollutes theaters.

    • @bellapool
      @bellapool Před 4 lety +6

      what about your mom's boyfriend Shane Diesel?

  • @ernestocruz9630
    @ernestocruz9630 Před 2 lety +48

    Imagine a future were there’s underground diesel community that takes deep frier grease to keep there cars alive.

    • @alexanderkingtickle
      @alexanderkingtickle Před 2 lety

      it already exists! i had a friend in high school whose brother owned an 80s Mercedes 240D that he converted to run on veggie oil

    • @barryobrien1890
      @barryobrien1890 Před 2 lety

      Think of the health of the supersize boys that have to eat all that junk food to get a gallon of fryer oil

  • @SloeJuice
    @SloeJuice Před 2 lety +50

    Well researched. I liked that they expressed the scepticism towards electric trucks. I don't think we'll ever see long range trucks go electric. The underlying problem is that electric trucks would need to be 70+% battery, leaving only 30-% for cargo. Unfortunately, the batteries are pretty close to the theoretical limit of energy density, so they won't improve drastically from where they're now. The only sensible electrification for trucks would be them going hybrid.

    • @d3str0i3r
      @d3str0i3r Před 2 lety +6

      two words: trolley trucks
      for long distance every truck tends to take more-or-less the same route, replace traffic lights along those routes with tram poles that also have an attached light, maybe double or triple their frequency as necessary
      don't get rid of that battery though, it can take the truck from the electrified highways to the delivery destination, and then from the next pickup back to the highway

    • @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270
      @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Před 2 lety +10

      It seems you are wrong. Volvo, Scania and Mercedes have been running 20 ton and 40 ton electric prototypes and will go into production next year. The Tesla Semi has been running loads from Nevada to California for a few years and will see first deliveries in 2022. Modification to the tractor unit can easily support up to 4 MT of battery weight and give 200-300 miles of range towing huge loads... and the sheer power and torque of electric motors outperform the most powerful diesels. Ten years ago people were sceptical about electric cars, now they are the only growth area in the car industry and are driving out fossil fuel car sales. Battery costs are being driven down inexorably by mass production as their energy density increases year on year. It will be great to see the end of diesel in all forms of road transport.

    • @garycoates6837
      @garycoates6837 Před 2 lety +1

      Diesel engine is a less pollutant than petrol this test was done a delphi test centre it's just you can see the nox coming out of the petrol engine electric cars are a stop gap till hydrogen comes along so you lot that have spent a fortune on electric cars you have bought a total lemon good luck 👍

    • @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270
      @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Před 2 lety +5

      @@garycoates6837 Diesel is dead. It is the most polluting fuel, more so than petrol due to the particulates and NoX but as you know sales of petrol and diesel vehicles are falling like a stone. EV’s are the future, hydrogen is a red herring, will never be able to compete on cost as the Wh/Kg of batteries increase year on year. You are talking to someone who researches this subject and has been published on it..in time you will see that you are wrong. I won’t bother answering if you persist in trying to argue with me.

    • @orangecookie3132
      @orangecookie3132 Před 2 lety +1

      @@d3str0i3r they have that in Germany

  • @charleswise3390
    @charleswise3390 Před 4 lety +281

    Funny thing is when R. Diesel first showcased the Diesel engine at the world fair, it was running on Peanut oil. Seems they are slowly getting back to where he had originally started. lol.

    • @Mr-Ad-196
      @Mr-Ad-196 Před 3 lety +4

      Wuh.....does tis mean I can smell burning engine peanut oil?

    • @samuelmatheson9655
      @samuelmatheson9655 Před 3 lety +8

      ha ha, peanut engine go brrrrrrrrrrrrr

    • @victorbobier3416
      @victorbobier3416 Před 3 lety +13

      @@Mr-Ad-196 And then there are the people with peanut allergies...

    • @LarryfromPH
      @LarryfromPH Před 3 lety +18

      So technically, biodiesel?

    • @julosx
      @julosx Před 3 lety +9

      For as much as I know, Rudof Diesel's idea was more into recycling the coal dust to power boats instead of wasting it. He died before liquid fuel became a thing.

  • @roberthaworth8991
    @roberthaworth8991 Před 4 lety +556

    Well, diesels ARE much less flammable when hit by an armor-piercing round. Historically, this is very important to Germans.

    • @ricome169
      @ricome169 Před 4 lety +17

      That's a good one lol

    • @overtaxed3628
      @overtaxed3628 Před 3 lety +24

      Yes, most likely, that's why all their tanks in ww2 were powered by gasoline engines !!

    • @ad220588
      @ad220588 Před 3 lety +2

      😂👍

    • @denysivanov3364
      @denysivanov3364 Před 3 lety +11

      @@overtaxed3628 Germany did not have oil during WW2, they were forced to produce gasoline from coal, it was expensive but worked since they did not have another choice.

    • @denysivanov3364
      @denysivanov3364 Před 3 lety +5

      @@peek5548 well, CH4 natural gas is super clean fuel, thats why we use it in our kitchens, so electric cars run on electricity produced by CH4 burning is super clean too. But maybe CH4 cars will be even better.

  • @fredricful
    @fredricful Před 3 lety

    Vorfor skall dere ha vinnmøller som er laget i kompositt materialer og så blir det slitt av luften og så må det byttes ut og norr bladene slites blanne kompositt materialene fra vindmølle vinger med luften så puster du det nedi dine lunger vorfor?

  • @rabhaw2327
    @rabhaw2327 Před 2 lety +7

    I have had a Citroen C4 1.6 115 Diesel for over 7 years now and never had a problem with it. It is serviced every year and I use a fuel additive every time I fill it up and it still drives like the day I bought it and has never failed an MOT. Best car I have ever had.

    • @sulahm3252
      @sulahm3252 Před rokem

      I my friend work as an mot tester and can tell you the amount of fumes they produce is much more and unsafe for health conditions but when coming to test diesel cars you can smell the bad fumes but will pass on the emissions just shows that even emissions tests are avoiding alot of things what they should not

    • @PeteTheL337
      @PeteTheL337 Před rokem +2

      @@sulahm3252 It's true, there are a lot of older diesel engines that shouldn't be running due to particle emissions. However, a modern diesel is something else entirely. My BlueHDI from 2019 does not smell or sod and it emits 47x less particles than the equivalent gasoline engine from the same year. This is all running on B7 diesel, imagen the benefits if we had an easier time filling the tank with something like HVO or perhaps something even better in the future.

    • @nuudelz3711
      @nuudelz3711 Před 11 měsíci +2

      This video is centred around Americans. Euro spec cars are far and above anything we have in North America. I don’t even have the option for diesel engine on my vehicle yet they are 90% of the specs in Europe.
      The gas lobby is too strong here

  • @jacobramsey7624
    @jacobramsey7624 Před 3 lety +302

    I learned that the first diesel engines ran on peanut oil, so maybe we should start trying that out.

    • @WineScrounger
      @WineScrounger Před 3 lety +51

      It’s been widely done, I’ve run diesels on vegetable oil. It works fine. As long as the fuel is flammable and offers reasonable lubrication to the high pressure side, it will run just fine.
      The downside is injector gumming, sticky piston rings and some very expensive bills especially on new and rather sensitive common rail systems. Veg oils work best on older, simpler diesels.
      This used to be a nice little solution for high U.K. fuel prices until the supermarkets caught on and made cooking oil cost as much as diesel in the first place.

    • @jacobramsey7624
      @jacobramsey7624 Před 3 lety +9

      @@WineScrounger what a shame on the price tag, but at least we can still use Dizzle powered muchines if one day oil is eather banned or becomes unavailable. Thanks for the reply👍😀.

    • @WineScrounger
      @WineScrounger Před 3 lety +3

      @@jacobramsey7624 no worries. You’re right, there’s still potential for running Diesel engines on renewables. Most U.K. diesel fuel is 7% biodiesel and it runs perfectly. Biodiesel is fatty acid methyl esters, made by reacting natural oily fats with methanol and it’s an excellent clean fuel if running straight veg oil is not an option.

    • @1towmater1
      @1towmater1 Před 3 lety

      And see how it turns out. look at ethanol, the cost to make it is so high it needs government subsidies to be competitive

    • @WineScrounger
      @WineScrounger Před 3 lety +3

      @@1towmater1 in fairness though you need to brew ethanol then distill it to dryness, it’s extremely energy intensive. Veg oil just needs to be extracted and there it is.

  • @dealerovski82
    @dealerovski82 Před 3 lety +266

    And not a single diesel engine was shown in this video.. great work cnbc..

    • @michaelric3540
      @michaelric3540 Před 3 lety +10

      Ya they were installing one into the big rig.

    • @masonwagers8505
      @masonwagers8505 Před 3 lety +16

      Apparently you weren’t watching the video

    • @boboutelama5748
      @boboutelama5748 Před 3 lety +4

      0:17
      2:04
      4:55
      12:24

    • @KOST1110
      @KOST1110 Před 3 lety

      ONE SHOULD LEARN HOW PRECISELY ONE CAN FAIL TO SHOW THE CORRECT IMAGE DESCRIPTION IN A VIDEO .........

  • @AlAl-wu7mp
    @AlAl-wu7mp Před 5 měsíci +6

    Over 250,000 miles and still getting 40 MPG with my Mercedes Diesel. Great cars.

  • @kennethwoolard5910
    @kennethwoolard5910 Před rokem +1

    My first car was an Isuzu Diesel Deluxe Coupe! In 1982 I was easily getting 42 mpg around town!!!! Loved that little car! In the summer it was so quite that I had to look at my Tachometer to see if it was running!!!

  • @97ameen
    @97ameen Před 3 lety +83

    yea..Vin diesel is disappearing from Fast and furious series too

  • @healthdios
    @healthdios Před 3 lety +300

    This is 2021....I'm still waiting on the flying cars.

    • @blackthunder8602
      @blackthunder8602 Před 3 lety +6

      we'll talk about it in about fifteen years, for now be content with looking at the $ 100k electric cars

    • @pedrolopes3542
      @pedrolopes3542 Před 3 lety +15

      They have been around for almost a century, but we don't call them cars, we call them helicopters

    • @alexm566
      @alexm566 Před 3 lety +1

      only problem is noise when parking or taking off. nothing that self flies can do so with acceptable noise.

    • @hashiramasenju6058
      @hashiramasenju6058 Před 3 lety +8

      Engineers have pretty much given up on the idea of flying cars due to the fact that in order to fly, the car would need to be light but to drive, it needs to be heavy.

    • @DIVISIONINCISION
      @DIVISIONINCISION Před 3 lety

      DeLorean died out in the 80's. Didn't you watch Back to the Future?

  • @trukeesey8715
    @trukeesey8715 Před rokem +1

    3:19 -- when you said "amount", did you mean volume, weight, moles, or mass? If volume, then at what temperature and altitude?

  • @norwoodTV1
    @norwoodTV1 Před 2 lety

    im digging the beat in the background

  • @jeffreymeyers6676
    @jeffreymeyers6676 Před 3 lety +216

    I always love the no emissions statement about electric cars like thier charging power magically appears from flying unicorns.

    • @ericsandrin8123
      @ericsandrin8123 Před 3 lety +24

      yes...they are so incredibly stupid...charging electric cars...with a diesel generator...now thats progress..electric cars failed in 1910..and they always will...

    • @gregbaniak9650
      @gregbaniak9650 Před 3 lety +15

      Electric cars are thd future, and you cannot stop progress, period. BTW take fir a spin Bolt and lets talk.

    • @kkal1183
      @kkal1183 Před 3 lety +9

      @@ericsandrin8123 that's why ICE car sales are falling off a cliff and EV sales are on fire. Good observation !

    • @ammerudgrenda
      @ammerudgrenda Před 3 lety +8

      @@ericsandrin8123
      Who charges an electric car with a diesel generator??

    • @Steve25g
      @Steve25g Před 3 lety +12

      @@ammerudgrenda all of you... or gas generators, nuclear plants, etc

  • @valt1337
    @valt1337 Před 3 lety +930

    short story: they're not
    there.. saved you 14 mins

    • @SashaM0915
      @SashaM0915 Před 3 lety +13

      Thank you lol

    • @yk-et3un
      @yk-et3un Před 3 lety +9

      Thank you

    • @Duck95ish
      @Duck95ish Před 3 lety +9

      we appreciate you!

    • @allenbercero3661
      @allenbercero3661 Před 3 lety +10

      Thanks, clicking out of this video now, view thirsty content creator using clickbait is always sad

    • @JoeBlack1108
      @JoeBlack1108 Před 3 lety +7

      @@vonBottorff everyone knows electric has tons of torque, that's why they use them in trains to pull them, but get the power from a Diesel engine.
      P.s the video you posted is just a propaganda video from Fordczcams.com/video/Au3U72CX74I/video.html
      That should explain the video

  • @sdavidb5620
    @sdavidb5620 Před 2 lety +3

    I really miss my Jetta diesel. It was a fantastic little ride. With the amount of driving I do. It was fantastic on sipping fuel.

    • @psmh4
      @psmh4 Před 2 lety +2

      2006 Jetta tdi 435k miles on it, runs like new

  • @fredricful
    @fredricful Před 3 lety

    Va er renest vannet fra eksosanlegget på bilen eller det du har i springen som drikkevann?

  • @BrianNC81
    @BrianNC81 Před 3 lety +74

    Own two diesels and they are both fantastic. I'm expecting to get 30+ years of life out of them. My diesel BMW car puts out outstanding power after tuning.. nearly 400 hp to the wheels and 600lb of torque yet can still achieve 40mpg and go 600miles on a tank. On the drag strip it will pull a 12.6 second 1/4 mile at 111mph. I have yet to see a gasoline or electric car that can match the range, efficiency, and performance of diesel. Electric has the torque and efficiency but not the range. Gas can lay down the power with a big V8 at the cost of efficiency and range.

    • @ronjohnson8119
      @ronjohnson8119 Před 2 lety +7

      If you have all of the emissions components on it then…….good luck. These are not your grandpa’s diesels.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety

      The downside will come once clean air schemes take hold. It'll cost a small fortune to drive ICE vehicles into many towns and cities worldwide. Paris and Berlin already banned diesel cars from their city centres. And we'll see a lot more of this coming in the years ahead..... Here in the UK, we're going to see clean air charging schemes in York, Leeds, Sheffield, Bristol, Bath, Coventry, Manchester, Oxford, Bradford, Aberdeen, Dundee, Glasgow and Edinburgh. There are likely to be others too.... The scheme already up and running in Birmingham, charges £8 per day - payable 7 days a week - to enter the city centre if your car or van cannot meet Euro 6 standards...... London's Congestion Charge scheme is having it's area of coverage increased by 18 times, and the daily cost to enter is also being increased...... I think you may need to revise that 30+ year life expectancy a little......

    • @jay-uo2bi
      @jay-uo2bi Před 2 lety +5

      You're not getting 30+ years out of your tuned BMD diesels lmao.

    • @AbcAbc-sp1od
      @AbcAbc-sp1od Před 2 lety +2

      @@jay-uo2bi I laughed at that too. Modern bmws won't last 30 years

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety +2

      All electric cars far exceed the *efficiency* of your BMW. You are confusing fuel consumption with efficiency. Your BMW is around 28% efficient at best. A typical electric car is 80 to 90% efficient.

  • @markadams5823
    @markadams5823 Před 4 lety +244

    I don't think diesel going anywhere anytime soon

    • @peterwilson5528
      @peterwilson5528 Před 3 lety +9

      Loosing Diesel for humanity its like having a broken leg hopping to the top of the mountain and throwing both your crutches off the top.

    • @stickynorth
      @stickynorth Před 3 lety +10

      I'm sure whalers said the same thing when the electric lightbulb was created too!

    • @royy9
      @royy9 Před 3 lety

      @Mavis Stapleton you wont, the robot driving It Will.

    • @ryandarko2115
      @ryandarko2115 Před 3 lety +4

      Definitely not in Europe

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Před 3 lety +4

      @Yejun Cheong buses(city, transit, school, intercity, parlour), locomotives, construction equipment, motorhomes, farm and construction tractors use them.

  • @alexanderkingtickle
    @alexanderkingtickle Před 2 lety +66

    i drive a dieselgate-era VW TDI, and i love it! yeah Volkswagen really messed up, but they (eventually) took responsibility for what happened and fixed all of the cars. i don’t plan on getting rid of it any time soon.

    • @pauldethick6175
      @pauldethick6175 Před 2 lety +16

      Me too, I couldn't care less about its emissions, I bought it for it's economy and running costs.

    • @johnsergei
      @johnsergei Před 2 lety +10

      @@pauldethick6175
      Good news for you, though all engines do polute, CO2 is not a polutant. In fact if CO2 dropped to 1/2 the current level, plants would start dying off, quickly followed by billions of humans!

    • @Tracert-mc1hu
      @Tracert-mc1hu Před 2 lety +8

      I have a friend who bought a Diesel Jetta Wagon in 2015. He loved it, but they made him an offer he couldn't refuse to rebuy it (basically sticker price on what was now a used car). He promptly went out and bought a Golf GTI.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 Před 2 lety +1

      @ John Sergei
      Lol.. so completely and utterly wrong.
      CO2 is a greenhouse gas. It captures solar energy and warms the earth far more than it normally would.
      How do you think humans survived for millennia before they had anything more than wood fires? Humans would not die if we stopped emitting CO2. Even plants would barely notice it. CO2 levels would not drop by half if we stopped burning fossil fuels. GHGs need to be balanced with fractions of a percent.
      Diesels emit far more than CO2. The main offenders are NOx emissions which destroy the ozone layer and let in cancer causing ionizing uv radiation and particulate emissions which cause respiratory problems and cancer.

    • @johnsergei
      @johnsergei Před 2 lety +7

      @@Bartonovich52 CO2 is indeed a warming gas (not greenhouse, the planet doesn't have a roof). But most of the so called warming is provided by water vapour. Why do you think clear nights are colder? (so much for the world being a greenhouse?)
      CO2 levels have varied dramatically during Earths history & there has neen no cionnection with the temperature.
      & have guess which is the most vital gas for life on Earth? (come on, it's easy, I've already spoonfed you!)
      & regarding diesel, it uses less fuel than a similar size petrol/gas engine & revs lower, so emits less of everything, (or is that too much logic???)

  • @davidhildebrand8894
    @davidhildebrand8894 Před 2 lety +2

    We have two Jetta TDIs and we LOVE them! We get 45-55 mpgs with them. Never going to turn them loose!

  • @4057hofft
    @4057hofft Před 4 lety +183

    Why does the narrator keep showing oil going in to the engine every time he talks about putting diesel into the car

    • @boxlid214
      @boxlid214 Před 4 lety +4

      No idea. Diesel isn't far off from light oils and kerosene though, you may as well be burning oil.

    • @rightsdontcomewithpermits7073
      @rightsdontcomewithpermits7073 Před 4 lety +2

      Maybe thats why some call it oil burner 🤷‍♂️.
      Love mine oil burner! All nice and deleted.

    • @Saddutchman
      @Saddutchman Před 4 lety +2

      An old Diesel engine will run on oil, heck you can use frying oil in em.

    • @lthundertree6385
      @lthundertree6385 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Saddutchman
      True. There is even a rarely occurring edge case failure mode of a diesel engine where it will start literally running on it's own engine's oil reserve, so you can't stop it by turning off the fuel pump flow!
      There are longterm maintenance issues, and emission issues though if the fuel is too funky.

    • @truckeemick2486
      @truckeemick2486 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Saddutchman if you put a mix of BP GO and napalm/mothballs in them then they really get up . might blow flames out the back but they go real hard with the mothballs in the tank.

  • @freggo6604
    @freggo6604 Před 4 lety +51

    10:00 That's a German ICE high speed train. They are fully electric :-)

    • @RobiBue
      @RobiBue Před 4 lety +5

      Yeah, I was first thinking “they are talking about the shift to electric”, of course Europe has had most of its trains run electric for several decades, and very few of them (mostly switch engines in railway yards) are diesel, but then they are talking about diesel being everywhere and purposely mention “most of the public transportation” showing the electric ICE!
      BIG FAUX-PAS!
      You just can’t trust your sources anymore, being in corrupt politicized media, baselessly created “informative” news outlets, or shows that just want to generate (attract) viewers with a few valid points but misguiding information.

    • @player6970
      @player6970 Před 3 lety

      Overhead!

    • @jamesbayly5785
      @jamesbayly5785 Před 3 lety

      Not a hybrid? Diesel electric?

    • @THESLlCK
      @THESLlCK Před 3 lety

      @@RobiBue The thing is though, those generators that power those trains....
      they're diesel lol

    • @RobiBue
      @RobiBue Před 3 lety

      @@THESLlCK are you seriously saying that the “ICE” locomotive is powered by diesel? If that is what you’re implying, then you really need to refresh your information on Europe’s rail transportation system. And if you’re thinking that European electricity is generated by diesel, then you’re also way off on that one too…
      The Americas, from Canada to the southern tips of Argentina and Chile, are mostly the ones polluting the air with their diesel powered trains.
      There are very few electric railroads on our side of the pond (the US) and with that I mean fully electric, not diesel-electric.

  • @charmerci
    @charmerci Před 2 lety +8

    What's never talked about is the countless number of times that long haul truckers keep their engines running for 6 hours every night while they sleep.

    • @royshaul2392
      @royshaul2392 Před rokem +4

      Actually most modern trucks have heaters and/or auxiliary power units so they don;t need to be run all night. The reason they used to need to idle all night is so there was heat or air conditioning available … temperatures inside a truck WILL become life threatening without it.

    • @vladmihai306
      @vladmihai306 Před rokem

      maybe in the us...trucks have auxiliary heaters.

    • @dsfkmgl6507
      @dsfkmgl6507 Před rokem

      In the winter you have to keep diesels running or else you will likely be unable to start it depending on how cold it gets outside

    • @vladmihai306
      @vladmihai306 Před rokem

      @@dsfkmgl6507 good, that's a nice "feature" of diesels that i am happy to have left in the past, given I've moved to a petrol car and starting in winter is a non issue.
      anyways, regarding keeping the engine on, european trucks have auxiliary heaters that will heat up the cabin and also heat up the engine to make it start even in -50. No need to keep it running.

  • @thelegendaryblackbeastofar39

    Bio-diesel is very controversial. I suspect that, at least with current production methods, it takes more fossil fuels to produce fertilizers for growing the bio-diesel crops than is saved by using the bio fuel. The market for bio-diesel has caused a sharp increase in the clearing of tropical forests for planting the required crops. It is also leading to an increase in food costs as farmers now have an incentive to grow bio fuel crops.

    • @sspiby
      @sspiby Před 2 lety +2

      stop eating beef if you care about tropical forests

    • @thelegendaryblackbeastofar39
      @thelegendaryblackbeastofar39 Před 2 lety

      @@sspiby It takes 10lbs of grain to produce 1lb of beef, a very poor way for feeding the world population. Cattle also produce a lot of methane which is 25 times more potent in causing global warming than an equal weight in co2.

    • @arher9598
      @arher9598 Před 2 lety +4

      @@sspiby ye stop eating veggies and fruits too... start photosynthesis yourself

    • @joshualloyd4275
      @joshualloyd4275 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You can farm algae for biodiesel - can be harvested mechanically with little need for fuel since it floats in water.

  • @BlackTeethMedia
    @BlackTeethMedia Před 4 lety +131

    Why not invest into Bio-Diesels like Sunflower, Vegetable and Hemp. Most Diesels engines need little to none changes to be able to use Bio-Diesels. Plus they put out much lower emissions.

    • @bobbybaucom4489
      @bobbybaucom4489 Před 4 lety +15

      Why? You run diesel equipment to farm those. Then the oil industry keeps making diesel regardless as a byproduct of making other petroleum products. I don't see the point in putting a large effort towards biofuel.

    • @BlackTeethMedia
      @BlackTeethMedia Před 4 lety +20

      @@bobbybaucom4489 Bio-Diesel is a sustainable fuel. And can be grown non stop and is cheaper to grow than to mine it

    • @BlackTeethMedia
      @BlackTeethMedia Před 4 lety +8

      @@bobbybaucom4489 if you use diesel to run the equipment to farm it then the farm has unlimited access to bio-diesel. You've just supported my point

    • @RaymondYocum-uw5hd
      @RaymondYocum-uw5hd Před 4 lety +4

      Because oil companies want to make money

    • @axemanracing6222
      @axemanracing6222 Před 4 lety +34

      Because people need food and it's a disaster to use cultivation areas for fuel instead of food.

  • @philipfreeman72
    @philipfreeman72 Před 4 lety +79

    Diesel engines efficiency can not be denied .

    • @putusudiarta1111
      @putusudiarta1111 Před 4 lety +7

      While more efficient than gasoline engine, still a far cry from eclectic motor which is 90%+ efficiency and already around us today. (vs 35% typical small engine diesel)

    • @putusudiarta1111
      @putusudiarta1111 Před 4 lety +2

      @Kevin Montrond yeah, the eV technology is still in infancy, there a lot more potential technology development in the future, unlike ICE technology that already mature and probably wont go a lot further. Tesla claims they already have million mile battery technology waiting for production that will make truck freight possible in term of purchase cost with their tesla semi truck. Even now they already have production eVs faster (more powerful: torque & horsepower) than most more expensive ICE supercars. And the next tesla roadster (aka roaster) will be the car to rule them all. Diesel will still have place in big ship engine, maybe competing with hydrogen fuel motor.

    • @hgm8337
      @hgm8337 Před 4 lety

      Kevin Montrond which is exactly what is happening, what’s your point?

    • @dinuciora2633
      @dinuciora2633 Před 4 lety +7

      Diesel engine is most efficient,power limited by smoke,limt smoke more and still will be efficient,on electric cars not enough metals needed in production,electric car IS NOT the future

    • @bindukopparapu2795
      @bindukopparapu2795 Před 4 lety +3

      @Kevin Montrond Plus, ICE technology still has untapped potential, like see the new opposed-piston engine being developed by Achates Power. That could really revolutionize car travel.

  • @quilmesdave
    @quilmesdave Před 2 lety

    I have 190 D 5 speeds, 1984. It's a beauty!!

  • @rali5381
    @rali5381 Před 2 lety +1

    Can someone please care to advise me? I'm thinking of buying a diesel car (may be 1.6 - 2.0 litre diesel engine?) around January/February 2022 time, I live in UK and with the "clean air zone" laws already kicking in major cities.. Is it worth buying a diesel engine or is it wiser to wait and save up for a hybrid or electric vehicle?
    Hybrid & Electric vehicles are very expensive here

  • @Putt-Putt
    @Putt-Putt Před 4 lety +70

    I would love an episode about CNBC and how they found their CZcams game. Most of their content is interesting and something I never even think about.

    • @beezymeech
      @beezymeech Před 4 lety +6

      they're finally catching up, thats what

  • @ShubhoBose
    @ShubhoBose Před 4 lety +140

    Only in America. In South Asia, diesel is extremely popular.

    • @enriquevillacoronado2249
      @enriquevillacoronado2249 Před 4 lety +24

      In europe as well (at least in Spain)

    • @Ilikepie18855
      @Ilikepie18855 Před 4 lety +14

      In South Africa it’s popular too. We only have diesel pickups.

    • @acoustic6865
      @acoustic6865 Před 4 lety +9

      @Tony Dinh What? the original commenter was commenting about the fact that diesels are only disappearing in cars in america? I personally own 2 diesel vehicles and live in america, while i may be the underwhelming minority of people, i love my diesel vehicles.

    • @Amit_Kumar_Trivedi
      @Amit_Kumar_Trivedi Před 4 lety +1

      For the first time, diesel has become more expensive than petrol (or nearly as expensive). It will only be limited to those uses where high torque or pull is required. Alternative petrol technology is also catching up, with the supercharged engines.

    • @acoustic6865
      @acoustic6865 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Amit_Kumar_Trivedi if you own a diesel lookup videos and such on how to make biodiesel. Both my 2008 diesel and 1984 diesel run 100 percent on biodiesel made from oil from restaurants. I spend like a quarter of what i would normally spend on buying diesel from the pump.

  • @humblecourageous3919
    @humblecourageous3919 Před 2 lety +1

    We bought a 2017 Chevy Volt in March 2020, right before everything shut down. I love it. I hardly ever have to get gas - only when we go on a longer trip. It goes about 50 miles on electric. We have had solar for 20 years. So most of our fuel is basically free.

  • @georgesealy4706
    @georgesealy4706 Před 3 lety +1

    I have a 2014 VW Jetta Sportwagen TDI, and it gets an honest 41-42 MPG around town. I check it every fill up. This car has been adjusted by VW after the scandal. Previously I had a 2001 VW Golf TDI. Four years ago, I sold it to a neighbor with 326,000 miles on it. It is still in use. The only problem it had was a leaking fuel pump that was caused when sulphur was eliminated from all diesel fuel. The fuel pump was rebuilt with different gaskets and the car was good to go. I expect to keep my 2014 for many years.

  • @AgentSmith911
    @AgentSmith911 Před 3 lety +237

    I'm driving a diesel as a daily driver, and I love it!

    • @brandonlewis5045
      @brandonlewis5045 Před 3 lety +59

      me too screw electric garbage

    • @alphatrion100
      @alphatrion100 Před 3 lety +3

      Sure some people like agricultural vehicles

    • @alphatrion100
      @alphatrion100 Před 3 lety +5

      @Willie Peter
      Diesel sound like crap.
      Also when you compare, be fair!
      a 2.0 turbo petrol (like a subaru impreza) will DESTROY any 2.0 litre turbo diesel.

    • @roky-wd9ib
      @roky-wd9ib Před 3 lety +1

      But your agent smith

    • @moongazer07
      @moongazer07 Před 3 lety +2

      @@brandonlewis5045 f you diesel causes cancer electric cars don't and if the electric car goes in flames you don't have to worry because no fuel is in it but a diesel or gas car it can explode diesel takes longer but the explosion is bigger

  • @konigstiger3252
    @konigstiger3252 Před 3 lety +156

    Why is everyone trying to force electric car on everyone

    • @jellybeans0493
      @jellybeans0493 Před 3 lety +38

      Because of politicians who think they know stuff without every spending a day in the real world. But on the other side they also did it in the old days to make sure that people spent more of their money, in Belgian they started giving tax cuts to people who installed double glass windows so that people would spend money (Thats was before people gave a damn about global warming (edit: climate change* not global warming) ).
      So it's either because they think they need to choose for us or because they want us to spend more money.
      It's become a f'd up world where politicians think they always know what's best for us. Vote for less government mate, "Less government=Less problems"

    • @ammerudgrenda
      @ammerudgrenda Před 3 lety +23

      Electric cars are starting to become a very viable option.
      It will inevitably become the preferred engine option in the not so far future.

    • @ebonymaw8385
      @ebonymaw8385 Před 3 lety +10

      @@ammerudgrenda i doubt it

    • @marc-andreservant201
      @marc-andreservant201 Před 3 lety +12

      @w4csc You're meant to charge your car at home overnight. DC fast charging stations are still slower than a gas pump, require expensive power electronics and do not make sense for daily use. You use them for long trips, which is why superchargers are located mostly along highways. Also, Atlanta is within twice the range of a Tesla model 3, so you'd need a single Supercharger pit stop which would take 1.25 hours, NOT 10, and certainly not weeks. Besides, you need to stop for food anyway on such a long trip.

    • @graveripper69
      @graveripper69 Před 3 lety

      @@jellybeans0493 and enter... #BITCOIN

  • @roboparks
    @roboparks Před rokem +2

    It takes more oil to make a Gallon of Diesel than a gallon of gas. 47% of 42 gallons is 19-3/4 gallons of gasoline per barrel of oil. 23% of 42 gallons is 9.6 gallons of diesel/fuel oil per barrel of crude oil. The Ratio is almost 2-1 . 42 Gallon Barrel makes 20 Gallons of gas . 42 Gal Barrel make 10 Gallons of diesel.

  • @Man-of-war22
    @Man-of-war22 Před 2 lety

    Very educational..
    Love it!

  • @raus_mit_Islam
    @raus_mit_Islam Před 3 lety +114

    Haha as soon as the car manufacturers started actually making low emission diesel engines, politicians want to ban it.

    • @gregoryeverson741
      @gregoryeverson741 Před 2 lety +3

      we almost had hybrid cars, but government stepped in and made them worthless, 30-40mpg on a hybrid car is junk

    • @ChrisBa303
      @ChrisBa303 Před 2 lety +2

      I live near Stuttgart and they banned old diesels because the air got really bad their due to all the diesels. Iam not an electric vehicle fan but development on electrics was long over due for many classic car brands

    • @raus_mit_Islam
      @raus_mit_Islam Před 2 lety +3

      @@ChrisBa303 banning OLD diesels is fine, but new ones are still the propulsion of the future. The batteries of electrical cars are WAY too small for the kind of distances Germans drive on Autobahn.

    • @armyofninjas9055
      @armyofninjas9055 Před 2 lety +3

      @@raus_mit_Islam Lol your entire country is smaller single states in my country. Texas is like 2/3 of Europe. Alaska is the size of all of Europe. Your autobahn is nothing compared to the US interstate freeway system.

    • @darius4748
      @darius4748 Před 2 lety +9

      @@armyofninjas9055 Europe is at least 10 times larger than Texas...

  • @silasdietrich7464
    @silasdietrich7464 Před 4 lety +60

    Volkswagen Passat TDI (diesel model) one of the best cars I've driven, very well designed (interior) motor was awesome made gas feel aweful. Shame about the Volkswagen scandal

    • @NEVER--MIND
      @NEVER--MIND Před 4 lety +6

      It's too bad. I owned a 2010 VW Diesel(Jetta Sport Wagon) I crashed it, before the buyback happened. :-(
      You could run your finger inside the tailpipe, and there was no sign of soot, unlike my older diesel vehicles. VW 'cooked the books' but it was a very clean running diesel vehicle.

    • @thebeast12333
      @thebeast12333 Před 4 lety +2

      @alan bane The regular TDIs were the legendary engines not the PD.

    • @PremiumFuelOnly
      @PremiumFuelOnly Před 4 lety +1

      Since they dont make them anymore, I plan on parking my 5spd manual as a collectors car once I find an Audi gasser to replace it as a daily driver.

    • @blueteeth.spooker
      @blueteeth.spooker Před 4 lety

      @alan bane Right there with you. LOVE the pd130 in my Mk4. Love the way it develops power, 6 gears; long legs for long journeys & 54mpg. TBH I hope it lasts forever.
      Dread the idea of electric motorcycles, too - If I ever had to have one, it would be a driverless one. : ) Big fire-breathing, swamp-monster V-twin from Lake Como is what you want. Power, noise, soul & character. Viva Europe, good luck America - AND therestoftheworld.

    • @Olliebobalong
      @Olliebobalong Před 4 lety +6

      Most VW consumers didn't care for the so called scandal (all makers were doing some form of cheating) because the TDI's are just so good.

  • @gregcrabb3497
    @gregcrabb3497 Před 2 lety +1

    I had an old Chevy truck with a diesel V8 in it. No computers or turbos, no DPF, just a simple engine. i used to get rid of old oils around the house in that old truck. I'd fill it almost full with diesel then add transmission fluid. When I had a bottle of old vegetable oil in the kitchen, I'd pour it in my truck. Never hurt it. I miss that old truck. Had it been a 4wd I never would have sold it.

  • @ar12.
    @ar12. Před 2 lety

    In Australia their very common still Toyota 4wds have diesel and a decent amount of suv aswell across the range.

  • @serjiang
    @serjiang Před 4 lety +119

    Love our diesel SUV but won’t buy another car that needs flammable liquid to run again. Our next vehicle will be electric.

    • @SDav21
      @SDav21 Před 4 lety +2

      What do you use your diesel SUV for? Towing? Daily family hauling? Work duties? Will electric work for your needs? Also, diesel isn't really flammable since it needs high pressure to ignite. Unlike petrol/gas, it won't ignite if simply lit.

    • @alexlu9564
      @alexlu9564 Před 4 lety +36

      @@SDav21 driving probably

    • @zeryphex
      @zeryphex Před 4 lety +2

      @J J
      Yay for electric vehicles!

    • @solar5286
      @solar5286 Před 4 lety +3

      I just bought a 2014 Q5 TDI (with the recall update installed) and am 100% in the same boat. The fuel economy and performance are unmatched in its size class. I can hit 60 in under 6 sec and even tow a u-haul due to the ludicrous 428 lbs-ft of torque. Smells cleaner than my last gas-powered car, too.

    • @SDav21
      @SDav21 Před 4 lety +5

      @@alexlu9564 What an intelligent answer. Don't be a doofus. Does he tow a trailer or caravan? Does he use it for work duties or for the school run? That's what I want to know. Your sarcasm isn't warranted. It was a genuine question.

  • @ivanavargova8078
    @ivanavargova8078 Před 3 lety +49

    I am driving Passat with a diesel engine as a daily and i love it!

    • @bingosunnoon9341
      @bingosunnoon9341 Před 3 lety +4

      Did you ever notice how people roll up their windows when you pulll up at a stop light?

    • @tunisiangladiator6509
      @tunisiangladiator6509 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bingosunnoon9341 I love how diesel smells like.. .

    • @christianmadsen7997
      @christianmadsen7997 Před 2 lety +2

      I allso like my 1992 Ford Transit turbo diesel

    • @smcc839
      @smcc839 Před 2 lety +5

      Skoda octavia tdi here 😌

    • @mikafiltenborg2291
      @mikafiltenborg2291 Před 2 lety

      I don't Hope you get lung-canser from your vw Passat diesel 😷

  • @georgesealy4706
    @georgesealy4706 Před 3 lety

    One of the current Jeep options is a diesel engine. I saw one the other day. Pretty cool in the Jeep Wrangler.

  • @glenngray3119
    @glenngray3119 Před 2 lety

    I just came across this video and noticed at 2:13 the guy is putting the pistons in the engine backwards with the rod ends to the top of the block, that is really weird.

  • @scott.ballard
    @scott.ballard Před 3 lety +32

    Shame on CNBC for not naming all of the other automakers who were involved in Dieselgate!! Volkswagen, Fiat Chrysler, Jeep, Nissan, Renault, Mercedes-Benz, Audi & Porsche

    • @jonathancorbin9425
      @jonathancorbin9425 Před 2 měsíci

      Many of these are really one company lol
      Volkswagen Audi and Porsche for example

  • @shmonyx
    @shmonyx Před 3 lety +44

    I don't really think i'll be switching from diesel any time soon

  • @Carnutzjoe
    @Carnutzjoe Před 2 lety +1

    At 11:30, talking about the newest generation of diesels with particulate reduction. And catalytic systems to keep them clean, that’s the first things that get ripped off that new GM, Ford, or Ram pickups and tossed in the trash. I know a few guys with diesel trucks for towing, and they brag about the ‘tune up chips’ installed for more power after the emission controls were removed. It’s so easy it’s as if the legacy companies designed the vehicles with removing emission controls in mind. Few places check emission controls on older vehicles.

  • @nonaurbiz1111
    @nonaurbiz1111 Před 2 lety +47

    When refining oil for gasoline, one of the FIRST steps is to get it to a diesel grade state. Costs less to make than gasoline and gets better mileage. Moral of the story: When it comes to energy there is no Utopia, only massive greed and the ability to position a product to "sound better" environmentally. Even EVs are powered by coal burning utilities.

    • @mpelevic
      @mpelevic Před 2 lety +8

      Not to mention environmentally devastating Lithium mines for batteries, and poor recycling possibilities. Dirty technology in its worst form.
      We need a new scientific breakthrough, new battery tech, cleaner electricity source or this transition is never going to happen in its full.

    • @Eduardo-lw6nd
      @Eduardo-lw6nd Před 2 lety

      And most of the electricity comes from nuclear power plants which couldn't be less environmentally friendly. Look at Chernobyl. And the ones we have now are far more devastating. That's the real threat to humanity and to the planet. We are slaves to those things forever, we have to keep cooling them otherwise it's a real apocalypse. But nobody cares, we are too occupied with being fed with this propaganda of the CO2 emissions.

    • @thegamerkhan
      @thegamerkhan Před 2 lety +2

      @@mpelevic The United States needs to improve it cities and use its transportation.

    • @mpelevic
      @mpelevic Před 2 lety +4

      @@thegamerkhan Not only US. The whole world is energy inefficient.

    • @planefan082
      @planefan082 Před 2 lety +1

      Why do people pretend green electrical grids don't exist?

  • @Marco911
    @Marco911 Před 3 lety +77

    Sacrificing air quality? Did everyone forget what the big cities smelled like just 10 years ago?

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn Před 3 lety +9

      That's an excuse for spewing cancer?

    • @chiquicat1
      @chiquicat1 Před 3 lety +4

      @Aidan callen watch the video again, less CO2 but more NOX and PM2.5 which are worse, not to mention carcinogenic. You keep telling yourself diesel is cleaner.

    • @chiquicat1
      @chiquicat1 Před 3 lety +1

      @Stolas the ones that quickly clog up and cost a fortune to replace you mean? Lol most people are not aware that you are meant do to long trips to avoid the filter clogging up, they just go for the cheaper option (then get a nasty surprise). Not to mention it is carcinogenic and emits very high NOX and PM2.5... Diesel drivers are real heroes.

    • @kuessebrama
      @kuessebrama Před 3 lety +6

      @@chiquicat1 most modern gasoline engines produce more PM2.5 then Diesel engines. Yeah the NOX is higher, but for that there is adBlue. Diesel cars with partical filter wich is standard since i don't know how many years (atleast in Germany) and with adBlue are extremly clean and efficient.

    • @kaneki1056
      @kaneki1056 Před 3 lety

      @ThePatUltra new diesel cars from atleast almost 10 years ago haven't given off fumes. i had a car from 2012 that gave off less fumes from it's petrol variant even at a similar rpm cause petrol engines just burn more fuel in the same time and i've checked this with the help of a friend who had the petrol variant and newer cars like stated in the video have nearly zero emissions mostly because of better filters and more efficient engines

  • @jquill6
    @jquill6 Před 4 lety +101

    I couldn’t believe the amount of petrol powered SUVs and pickups when I visited the US, the mileage must be appalling on those things . They sounded great tho 😂

    • @alexh349
      @alexh349 Před 4 lety +8

      Noise pollution is horrible. Plz stop we want to not disturb nature we need to be intellegent. At first people complained about the noise cars make now people are complaining about the lack of noise

    • @edwinbraun8282
      @edwinbraun8282 Před 4 lety +16

      Yes... full sized suv with gas engine is awful gas hog. 10 miles per gallon aka some 35 liters per 100 or sth. Crazy numbers

    • @aesma2522
      @aesma2522 Před 4 lety +4

      I rented a Tahoe in SF last year and the mileage is bad compared to an average European car, but not horrible. The price of gas in California surprised me though, around 4$/gallon, I expected much less. I slept in an old hotel and the street noise was crazy, not helped by the fact the street was uphill.

    • @skaie.
      @skaie. Před 4 lety +2

      @@aesma2522 If you got gas here in the city, SF has a gas tax on top of our state tax. You need to go out to the suburbs to see the $3/gal pumps

    • @jquill6
      @jquill6 Před 4 lety +7

      I was just referring to the burble of a petrol V8 at idle, sounds way better than the clatter of a diesel. We don’t hear that over in ireland.

  • @masterandy07
    @masterandy07 Před 2 lety

    How a out fitting solar panel on truck trailers?

  • @bryanmoore3051
    @bryanmoore3051 Před 2 lety +25

    Not only are they more fuel efficient but also more cost effcient especially in the long term. The longevity and reliability is worth it to me.

    • @joebloggs2312
      @joebloggs2312 Před 2 lety

      It's the turbocharger that makes a "Turbo Diesel" fuel efficient; but now they start making "Turbo Petrol", the gaps in fuel efficiency is much smaller, comparable even. Plus you have to spend thousands more to buy a diesel engine in the first place.

    • @bryanmoore3051
      @bryanmoore3051 Před 2 lety +2

      @@joebloggs2312 yeah a diesel is most expensive initially but much less maintenance over time. Yeah parts and repair can be more expensive but in general they are less maintenance. They run cooler in general and just overall last longer. When people started to have issues is when they started putting all the emission regulated stuff on em, EGR,DEF,Diesel partical filters etc. I've got a 3/4 ton truck that gets about 20 on the highway but a gas engine making even 3/4 of the torque is going to annihilate fuel. My VW TDI gets around 52mpg and is definitely less maintenance then my gasoline engine car, especially after EGR was deleted and a better high flowing cat. I understand the point is to reduce emissions but I feel like if you're feeling up less in the first place then you are achieving the same goal you are burning less fuel. Bio diesel is extremely economic, It's easy to make and your using half the diesel #1 you would normally be using, I'm talking actual 60/40 bio diesel not the diesel #2 they claim is bio diesel.

    • @bryanmoore3051
      @bryanmoore3051 Před 2 lety +2

      @@joebloggs2312 also the turbo isnt what's making it fuel efficient, If your talking power though, comparing a forced induction engine to a naturally aspirated in terms of HP/TQ then yeah you can squeeze more power out of a forced induction engine and get better fuel economy. Diesels make a lot more torque not only because of the stroke but how they "fire". They also run cooler man, which means longer lasting and things like oil changes aren't near as often. They are also extremely simple by design... You can get insane fuel mileage out of a little four-cylinder,8 valve,single over head cam diesel engine and get a half million miles out of the motor easily. There's no way around it they are without a doubt less maintenance.

    • @joebloggs2312
      @joebloggs2312 Před 2 lety

      @@bryanmoore3051
      I also have a Golf in Mk7 TSI. 48 mpg longterm combined cycle (mix of urban and highway) on premium fuel. 127,000km (79,000 miles) and I do oil changes, filter changes, tyre rotations, etc myself so hardly ever need to check it in for repairs or maintenance. It's in stock form, and working great

    • @User-cb4jm
      @User-cb4jm Před 2 lety

      Lol’d at “longevity and reliability”. Maybe if you are comparing two Volkswagens given how unreliable VW petrol engines are, but try a Toyota or a Honda engine and they’ll show you how reliable they can make ‘em.

  • @hottomlie
    @hottomlie Před 3 lety +81

    I love my diesel. The power, efficiency and durability and longevity is incredible. I don't want to ever go back to gas, and definitely not electric.
    There has been a media bias in the states for years it's obvious. They don't sell them here like rest of world. As long as we have long haul trucks, there will never be end to diesel.

    • @tthomassims9005
      @tthomassims9005 Před 3 lety +1

      long haul truckers would ware out an engine in like 50 K miles or less gas does not have the turque to move their loads from a dead stop nor to get it up a hill transmissions with extreme gear ratios will ware out faster its a no win to rely on gas nuclear power relies deisel to supply backup power if gas was so great why would they use desiel

    • @youxkio
      @youxkio Před 2 lety

      Perfect for COAL ROLLING!!!!!!! OH YEAH!!

    • @OfOld
      @OfOld Před 2 lety +1

      Yea...id like to see how long it would take an electric rig to make a run

    • @lightningstrikestwice6302
      @lightningstrikestwice6302 Před 2 lety +1

      General motors diesel back in the '80s didn't help it either.

    • @lightningstrikestwice6302
      @lightningstrikestwice6302 Před 2 lety

      Oh! There will be an end to diesel eventually. You may not live long enough to see it but they'll be an end to it. The emission systems to keep a diesel clean are horrendous. Not to mention expensive to maintain!

  • @billrowden5917
    @billrowden5917 Před 3 lety +15

    Love my 7.3 ford diesel and my 2015 VW 45 mpg

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn Před 3 lety +1

      Super polluting unless bio or renewable diesel, just look at what Rudolph Diesel intended..peanut oil.

    • @brandonlewis5045
      @brandonlewis5045 Před 3 lety

      @@NicholasLittlejohn so is electric pal

  • @robertolaggo9141
    @robertolaggo9141 Před 5 měsíci +1

    In eu, more specific in ireland most of new cars sold are diesel. They not disappearing at all. It takes ages to disappear

  • @george2pak
    @george2pak Před rokem +1

    As a euro-american I am sad to see very limited options on diesel vehicles. I think every hybrid vehicle available in 2023 in the USA should have the option of a diesel engine. Especially anything bigger than midsize SUV's and midsize pick up trucks.

  • @troymelvin4870
    @troymelvin4870 Před 4 lety +18

    Long live the Deisel engined car! I've driven diesels for years now and will never switch back to petrol. There is no denying that a well maintained diesel engine will last way longer than comparable petrol engines. That alone makes them much more cost effective. Then there is the fact that I get many more miles to the gallon than the comparable petrol engine. Even allowing for the artificially higher price per litre of diesel here in the UK, I've calculated that my mileage is cheaper than my petrol powered neighbour.

  • @Lionn8563
    @Lionn8563 Před 4 lety +139

    Aaaahhh, in eastern europe people will NEVER, NEVER get rid of diesel

    • @stephendoherty8291
      @stephendoherty8291 Před 4 lety +15

      Depends on whether Eastern European citizens don't suffer from air pollution. If your kids are choking, then a love of diesel might seem a push.

    • @Gilotopia
      @Gilotopia Před 3 lety

      @@stephendoherty8291 it'll be banned in the whole EU soon

    • @stephendoherty8291
      @stephendoherty8291 Před 3 lety

      @Oliver Matthews fewer carbon dioxide but higher NOX and worse, high particulates to which we can only filter down so far.

    • @stephendoherty8291
      @stephendoherty8291 Před 3 lety +6

      @kirk mcloren By burning down the rain forest and planting sugar to extract biodiesel from sugar alcohol

    • @MVEProducties
      @MVEProducties Před 3 lety +1

      Of course, they are too fond of getting cancer there!

  • @sricharanreddy1922
    @sricharanreddy1922 Před 2 lety +10

    I love my diesel inspite of a gasoline and an electric car in my garage. I love my Audi Q5 TDI over my VW jetta and Hyundai Kona for long trips . The diesel is an absolute torque monster with great efficiency.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety

      But it's hardly efficient if it can only manage 30% efficiency. I think you're confusing economy with efficiency.

    • @princeofheaven19
      @princeofheaven19 Před 2 lety

      @@Brian-om2hh yes I know that the diesel is not that much efficient. In terms of efficiency my hyundai kona electric is the best since it converts electricity into motion directly. But the TDi engine has a good mileage approximately 18 km per litre of diesel and is good for cruising.

  • @MagMan4x4
    @MagMan4x4 Před 2 lety

    10:17 I recognized Texas canyon on I10 in AZ near the NM border. Drive that way often!

  • @Ftalmeida73
    @Ftalmeida73 Před 4 lety +28

    4:52 "But seldom found on sports cars or race cars". They surely haven't heard about Audi R10, R15 and R18 or the Peugeot 908 HDi Le Mans prototypes.

    • @johnm91326
      @johnm91326 Před 3 lety +6

      Have you heard the definition of seldom? It doesn't mean never.

    • @georgemckenna462
      @georgemckenna462 Před 3 lety +1

      This CNBC mockumentary sure seems to have some sort of agenda.
      Hey Fun Fact Francisco! Diesel engines were run at Indy. Unfortunately the damn things wouldn't stop enough for fuel!

    • @brianpatrick8787
      @brianpatrick8787 Před 3 lety +3

      Cummins ran one at Indy 500 in the 1960s. DIESEL engines were banned after that becsuse it was decided they had to much of a fuel effency advantage

    • @julosx
      @julosx Před 3 lety

      These cars had their day due to the regulations being bended to make sure they'd win by limiting everyone else's possibilities. Plus they were mere prototypes made by big industry and big money. They were impossible to drive under the rain. So the regulation changed to a more balanced one and they just disappeared as fast as the appeared.

    • @joecummings1260
      @joecummings1260 Před 3 lety +1

      @@brianpatrick8787 1952 and it set a lap record and took pole position.

  • @chaparra71
    @chaparra71 Před 3 lety +29

    I’ll keep right on driving my diesels, thank you. It’s a good thing Diesel engines last basically forever with proper care and maintenance.

    • @Ididerus
      @Ididerus Před 2 lety +1

      Until they installed the emissions equipment that kills them. Trucks used to last over a million miles, now you're lucky to get half of that.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety

      Diesel engines might last forever, but the supply of diesel won't......

  • @fredricful
    @fredricful Před 3 lety

    Vorfor i idrett skall man bruke digital dømming på idrett er det ingen som gidder og utdanne seg till dommere i idrett og somm er oppegående i skallen?

  • @cocreatoris
    @cocreatoris Před 2 lety +28

    I love diesel engine cars. It gives a smooth and sensational drive. Very efficient and powerful. Manufacturers and scientists have to think of ways to keep them alive with less carbon emission or plant more trees so that this emission doesn't matter to the environment.

  • @williamwingo4740
    @williamwingo4740 Před 3 lety +7

    In the late 1980's my folks had a VW Rabbit Diesel with a five-speed stick shift. It wasn't much on acceleration, but it would cruise at 75 mph on the interstate all day.

    • @ernstschafer6092
      @ernstschafer6092 Před 2 lety +2

      if you ask the EU-Parlament today you would have to go into jail for that offense :DD

    • @williamwingo4740
      @williamwingo4740 Před 2 lety

      @@ernstschafer6092 Fortunately this was in Alabama.

    • @AutumnWind92
      @AutumnWind92 Před 2 lety +1

      @@williamwingo4740 what a classic car. I still drive my mk2 as a daily

  • @blindbob2539
    @blindbob2539 Před 3 lety +31

    i love my diesel truck. 630,000 miles and going strong. straight pipe exhaust ,no emissions 500hp at the wheel. that cummins is a beast.

    • @neoanderson7492
      @neoanderson7492 Před 3 lety

      you could have saved 1000s if you drove a hybrid prob enough to buy a whole other car

    • @blindbob2539
      @blindbob2539 Před 3 lety +15

      @@neoanderson7492 I don't think they make a hybrid that I can put my welder and tools on

    • @neoanderson7492
      @neoanderson7492 Před 3 lety

      @@blindbob2539 then use your welder and tools to modify the hybrid to make it work

    • @blindbob2539
      @blindbob2539 Před 3 lety +13

      @@neoanderson7492 but the truck is perfection. Brilliantly engineered. Simple, powerful and dependable. Paid for since day one. Paid cash for it brand new. Diesels are phenomenal machines.

    • @neoanderson7492
      @neoanderson7492 Před 3 lety

      @@blindbob2539 it's your tens of thousands of dollars you're wasting gas money not mine

  • @2010hyundaielantra
    @2010hyundaielantra Před 3 měsíci

    a small diesel hybrid hatchback (something like the golf) would be awesome, especially if a manual trans was offered.

  • @XVeganDaveGodFreeX
    @XVeganDaveGodFreeX Před 2 lety +9

    I love my 2005 deisel Sprinter, almost 500k miles on it and I'm still getting 22 MPG carrying over a ton of cargo!

  • @craigtalbot607
    @craigtalbot607 Před 3 lety +39

    LOVE my Dieselgate VW returned to the road in 2019!! Hope to be driving it for 20 years!

    • @zianeshkasparen4358
      @zianeshkasparen4358 Před 3 lety +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😌 I have the same thoughts!!! I drive an older version and I love it. 11 years old and it still does not smoke and will not because I take care of my Polo.

    • @abovethelaw4417
      @abovethelaw4417 Před 3 lety +1

      VW is trash because its unreliable and expensive to maintain

    • @abovethelaw4417
      @abovethelaw4417 Před 3 lety

      @@zianeshkasparen4358
      Ur polo is objectively trash because its slow and unsafe

    • @TheGardenNoam
      @TheGardenNoam Před 2 lety +3

      @@abovethelaw4417 ahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha tdi engines are vw's most reliable engines

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety

      I fear your hopes may not be met. I'd say diesel will be quite difficult to find in 20 years time. And if you can find it, expect the cost to have risen by quite a lot. Products for niche markets usually cost way more....

  • @crazygood150
    @crazygood150 Před 4 lety +73

    Still seen in most farm and construction equipment. More like ALL...

    • @bngr_bngr
      @bngr_bngr Před 4 lety +1

      Eric one day they will eliminate the production of diesel

    • @jeffhines2895
      @jeffhines2895 Před 3 lety +5

      @@bngr_bngr They already have ball-less tractors with the def additives necessary-and 25% loss of power. Tier 4 crap that will break

    • @georgemckenna462
      @georgemckenna462 Před 3 lety +3

      Do you get the feeling that the little CNBC documentary has an agenda? The air was so hot that the fuel burned as soon as it was injected into the cylinder. This is a poor description.
      These engines should be left to the people who need and understand them.

    • @jimtekkit
      @jimtekkit Před 3 lety +1

      @@bngr_bngr 10 years from now? 100? 500? Maybe a few billion years when the sun vaporises the earth? That hardly narrows it down.

    • @nvo7024
      @nvo7024 Před 3 lety +1

      They can't, physically. Fractional distillation of petrol invariably produces diesel-grade fraction. Not as much as today's share of diesel (some of it is synthesized), but a very sizable share. If sales are banned then what will happen to unsold diesel? Cracking it down to ligher fractions is technically possible, but too costly. Burning for heating? Possible, but cleaning up flue gases to automotive exhaust standards isn't cheap too.

  • @fredricful
    @fredricful Před 3 lety

    UP kanse dere skall ha stor miliø disel kontroll i sommer nor alle kjører runt ja hvor mange kjører på såkalt miliødisel fyller det på biltanken for det er billigere en vanelig disel?

  • @alexandrecarvalho8624
    @alexandrecarvalho8624 Před 2 měsíci

    Shortly after Dieselgate erupted in Volkswagen, many Renault cars exceeded the Euro 6 limits for nitrogen oxides (Renault Captur 1.5 DCI and Renault Kadjar 1.6 DCI have exceeded the Euro 6 limit for nitrogen oxides by up to 16 times).

  • @waycoolscootaloo
    @waycoolscootaloo Před 4 lety +5

    I don't see electric cars becoming mainstream for a very long time yet. I can pull into a gas station and fill up my tank from empty to full in less than 5 minutes and be on the road again. A Tesla takes over an hour to fill up completely while charging. Also new taxes and fees are being imposed on electric vehicles by local governments and states. My friend has a hybrid and it already cost him twice as much as me to register his license plates for the year. Also electric cars are limited in range. Very cold weather affects their range as well. And if you try to tow just about anything, the range cuts in half from what's listed by the manufacturer. Try towing a 1,000 lbs pop up camper behind a Tesla model X and just watch your range plumet to nothing.
    A major breakthrough in battery tech needs to happen before electric cars become the norm.

    • @cobrachannel100
      @cobrachannel100 Před 4 lety +1

      And yet you dont need to pull into a gas station for like 99% of the cases because you always have "full tank" every morning. And most of us 99.9% of the time commute in town no more than 50 miles a day. Hence, it goes your argument out the window.
      In those other cases of long trips, you can use fast chargers (superchargers in case of TSLA) while taking a leek or a lunch break. Hardly a problem today. But, obviously, you have never driven a Tesla much less owned one. So u are disqualified to talk about this subject.

  • @makingwaves1239
    @makingwaves1239 Před 3 lety +116

    Modern diesel engines are far more environment friendly than the old ones. Diesel engines are a good choice for long distance travelling.

    • @rabot8837
      @rabot8837 Před 3 lety +14

      My Euro6-diesel is cleaner than most of the other cars on our roads. AD Blue takes care of that. Electrics cars...a scam. Here state collects the most profit of those, due to heavy taxation on electric power...

    • @denysivanov3364
      @denysivanov3364 Před 3 lety +6

      diesel is couple of times worse then gasoline car from pollution point of view.

    • @overbored617
      @overbored617 Před 3 lety +4

      @@denysivanov3364 but it's cheaper though and diesel engine repair and maintenance are cheap and easy

    • @rabot8837
      @rabot8837 Před 3 lety +5

      @@denysivanov3364 Denis, not true. Read this: youmatter.world/en/diesel-or-petrol-what-pollutes-more/

    • @nousername5673
      @nousername5673 Před 3 lety +5

      @@rabot8837 Electric cars are not a scam. According to physics, electric motors can be 85% efficient, if not greater, whereas diesel is 30 to 35% efficient and gasoline even lower. Plus, you can generate your own clean electrical energy to charge the battery, the batteries can be recycled by companies, and battery technology is constantly improving (especially with Tesla's innovations).

  • @ReflectedMiles
    @ReflectedMiles Před 2 lety +4

    My Golf TDI with the manual transmission would go nearly three times the range of the longest-range Tesla currently available on one 16-gallon tank of diesel. It also didn't have to be shifted down at all to cruise over many mountain passes with its available torque. I wish they remained a cleaned-up option.

    • @TheRagingPlatypus
      @TheRagingPlatypus Před 2 lety

      No car stinks like a VW. I can tell when a VW is nearby by smell alone.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles Před 2 lety

      @@TheRagingPlatypus Assuming we are talking about a vehicle made after about 2001 with the turbocharger and emissions controls functioning normally, the smoke and smell are much less than they were in diesel vehicles of any brand prior to that. VW's don't smell significantly different than any other diesel vehicle--in fact, far less odoriferous than most American trucks. Most of the smell now will be at start-up. The emissions scandal at VW was not about the main components in exhaust that smell.

    • @TheRagingPlatypus
      @TheRagingPlatypus Před 2 lety

      @@ReflectedMiles Nope, any VW not just start up. Have no idea what year they are, but most cars on the road have been made since 2001...that's 21 years ago. False, VWs absolutely stink, almost like they cheat.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles Před 2 lety

      @@TheRagingPlatypus Ummm. You do know that part of the settlement was bringing the cars up to standards, not cheating, right? They got new NOX catalysts, software reprogrammed, etc., that would meet EPA approval like all other manufacturers (e.g., Chevy Cruze). The nitric oxide that is smelly in diesel is also in gasoline and propane. The difference we detect in odor is usually from sulfur / byproducts. The pickup trucks in my city are far worse offenders than all the VW diesels put together (and there are quite a few).

    • @TheRagingPlatypus
      @TheRagingPlatypus Před 2 lety

      @@ReflectedMiles No, just no...VWs are worse. Oh, part of their punishment was following the law!

  • @wiolettapagowski5590
    @wiolettapagowski5590 Před rokem +1

    Our 2015 vw jetta gets consistently 60mpg ,we bought it used in 2017 for 20 thousand canadian, after 5 years ,I was offered 16 thousand even though it has 200 thousand miles.

  • @skywalkerhunterarchive
    @skywalkerhunterarchive Před 4 lety +131

    i tried filling up my diesel suv with vege oil. it runs just fine😂

    • @makingcookingfixing
      @makingcookingfixing Před 4 lety

      which vehicle and year was that? I am looking to get a diesel just for this purpose

    • @Cherokee93
      @Cherokee93 Před 4 lety +9

      @@makingcookingfixing get an older diesel such as a cummins 12v, 7.3 powerstroke, 6.0 powerstroke, 7.3 idi/6.9idi, or an old Volkswagen diesel

    • @Cherokee93
      @Cherokee93 Před 4 lety +6

      @@makingcookingfixing if you know nothing about cars dont get a diesel

    • @makingcookingfixing
      @makingcookingfixing Před 4 lety +1

      @@Cherokee93 Thank you!

    • @cancelled_user
      @cancelled_user Před 4 lety +13

      Unless it's used vegetalbe oil that would otherwise go to waste, you are basically burning food.

  • @ArianaTheDopest
    @ArianaTheDopest Před 3 lety +58

    I got 24k from VW when they bought back a diesel I had paid 4000 for salvage title

    • @edgarvilchis7517
      @edgarvilchis7517 Před 3 lety

      Was it a fixer upper? Or was it recalled?

    • @ArianaTheDopest
      @ArianaTheDopest Před 3 lety

      @@edgarvilchis7517 it was a buy back

    • @byroncastillo1107
      @byroncastillo1107 Před 3 lety +1

      We bought a tdi in late '15 , drove it for 2 years. Bought it with a $5k coupon through true car, got all of our money back.

  • @jackdarby6080
    @jackdarby6080 Před 10 měsíci

    I had a Diesel VW Golf for 8 years, and it was absolutely fantastic. Now own a newer petrol Golf GTI. It's great fun, but I still sometimes miss the diesel engine. That little 1.6 TDI engine had way more power than any newer petrol 1.6 engines on motorways.
    I recently drove a modern 1.4 petrol Vauxhall Corsa, and on paper it had faster 0-60mph than my diesel golf. But it absolutely struggled when it came to motorway driving. Overtaking would be impossible sometimes.

  • @SkittyDoogle
    @SkittyDoogle Před 4 měsíci

    The death of diesel in standard passenger vehicles was definitely the VW dieselgate scandal. My dad had one of those cars. We got pieces of mail from VW about the compensation and how to turn it in if he didn't want to keep it. Obviously the compensation was VERY enticing and he sold it back. It was ~$14,000 for the car (2012 Jetta TDI) plus ~$5600 in compensation, so he got nearly $20k for it. He rolled that money into a gasoline powered 2015 Honda Crosstour EX-L and never thought about diesel again.