Toyota Going 100% Hybrid By 2020 619
autofan1 writes "Toyota's vice president in charge of powertrain development, Masatami Takimoto, has said cost cutting on the electric motor, battery and inverter were all showing positive results in reducing the costs of hybrid technology and that by the time Toyota's sales goal of one million hybrids annually is reached, it 'expect margins to be equal to gasoline cars.' Takimoto also made the bold claim that by 2020, hybrids will be the standard drivetrain and account for '100 percent' of Toyota's cars as they would be no more expensive to produce than a conventional vehicle."
GM Pledges to have a hybrid vehicle by 2020! (Score:4, Funny)
-Rick
Re:Sole automobile transmission is a hybrid in 202 (Score:4, Funny)
Big deal! (Score:3, Funny)
Toyota does not make cars (Score:2, Funny)
That's why going hybrid will not damage its qualities.
Sorry Toyota, in my 30s I'm not old enough to drive your vacuum cleaners
In related news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All Cars or Trucks Too? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Conservation alternative (Score:2, Funny)
Do you know what happens in a Three mile Island meltdown? The core becomes so hot that it literally melts down through the earth. As it goes deeper and deeper, steam shoots out of the ground all around the power plant. Keep in mind this is radioactive steam that would kill you if you were to be in contact with it. This is for a radius of miles, not close in... I think the environment would cry a lot more if it was saturated with life killing doses of radiation for the next 10,000 years...
Here's a quote from a Time article outlining this phenonoman
"Though the accident was a type of core meltdown, the ultimate nuclear power nightmare, U.S. experts also called it a burnup. Meltdowns technically occur in reactors containing pools of water. When the water boils away, the molten core sinks into the earth in the so-called China syndrome, a term used by scientists, and popularized by the 1979 movie of the same name, that mordantly suggests that the radioactive mass might plunge all the way through the earth. The Chernobyl plant had no such pool, by contrast, and engineers expect the reactor to be consumed by intense heat."
article
Ugh (Score:2, Funny)
You see, you replace the engine with a turbine, and that turbine charges a battery. All you do is charge the battery the first time, and that starts you going. when the wind flows through the turbine, it charges the battery, keeping you going.
It's brilliant! Really!