Are Hybrids Really the Wave of the Future
The future, a wonderful, mysterious, awe-inspiring time has
promises for us. Many dream of ending cancer and other
diseases. Others dream of bicycles that fly. And could we
someday be able to transport ourselves from one place to
another? Perhaps. But some of us have dreams that aren't that
big. All we want is a car that runs on something other than
fuel.
Maybe one nice sunny day, we could all drive up to the pump
and put some interesting chemical in our car that would make it
run forever. Maybe we could gas up on some cooking oil or even
oxygen. But for now, we have hybrids. Maybe they are the answer
to our dilemma. Are these cars the wave of the future?
It seems like they are for many reasons. These cars are
electric. "Electric" is a word that is linked with innovation
and imagination. Electric signals "power." That means the power
to run and the power to run for miles and miles. That's what a
hybrid car is all about. When you get in one, you'll know
you'll get to where you need to go and you won't have to stop
at ten gas stations on the way.
Remember when Edison came out with the electric light bulb?
Everyone thought it was a great invention, and it has changed
the lives of all of us. So a hybrid car is also changing all of
our lives. It's new, and very technologically advanced. Hybrid
cars should get the same kind of recognition Edison did.
However, hybrid cars do take some fuel to run them, but that
doesn't mean we should applaud them for being able to run on
both electricity and fuel.
With all of the above reasons, hybrid cars seem to be the
wave of the future, but there are a couple of reasons why that
may not be true. For instance, there must be some reason why
hybrids are not selling more than conventional cars. That's
because the average customer who looks at the sticker price on
a hybrid car is stunned. It's just too much money for the
average car buyer. And how can a car be the wave of the future
if it scares people away every time they come to look at it on
the dealers' lot?
Since the cost possibly overrides the benefits of the hybrid
car, a hybrid car may just be a transitional car, and the
actual wave of the future might be a car that is fueled by
something other than "fuel." Whatever that "fuel" is, I'm sure
we will all like it and then we'll be calling that fuel the
wave of the future.
Some people today are already fueling their cars with
cooking oil, but that doesn't seem to have caught on world wide
like hybrid cars have. Therefore, cooking oil does not seem to
be the solution for us. But, maybe some day, people will start
fiddling with their hybrid cars and come up with something much
better than the design that is before them.
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