Quote from: "jackbombay"I was referring to PZEVs (Partial Zero Emissions Vehicles), which I have heard, when run in LA, have emissions cleaner than the air that went into the engine.Where in LA?
I was referring to PZEVs (Partial Zero Emissions Vehicles), which I have heard, when run in LA, have emissions cleaner than the air that went into the engine.
If it's by the port then my diesel bunny probably emits fewer pollutants than are in the air.
Diesel trucks spew pollutants as they cruise Interstate 5 and Highway 99. Though cleaner engines and fuel are on the way, manufacturers knowingly produced 1.3 million engines that emit excess pollution to improve gas mileage and performance on the freeway.
Less than 10% of the cars produce most of the automobile pollution.
from here1980 11,497,486 1990 14,531,529
Quote from: "lyeinyoureye"Quote from: "jackbombay"I was referring to PZEVs (Partial Zero Emissions Vehicles), which I have heard, when run in LA, have emissions cleaner than the air that went into the engine.Where in LA? The LA basin as a whole, the air might be a touch worse by the ports, but air is pretty homogenized so exact location doesn't make a huge difference.
Quote from: "lyeinyoureye"If it's by the port then my diesel bunny probably emits fewer pollutants than are in the air.I've been around plenty of old IDIs, I'm sure if you locked yourself in a garage with a running IDI you'd die within 24 hours at most, you'd probably be dead in a few hours is my guess. If the air was truly dirtier around the ports than your exhaust how would anybody be able to work a whole 8 hour shift there?
Are you serious? You'll die in a garage w/ a running vehicle for the same reason you'll die if you seal up your house too much w/ any CO source, which has very little to do w/ local air pollution and a lot to do w/ CO poisoning.
New cars have very low CO emissions, a new car might kill you due to O2 depletion, but from CO poisoning it would take a very long time, probably not ever.
"When cold engines first start, they run rich," Greiner said. The catalytic converter is cold and not converting deadly carbon monoxide (CO) to carbon dioxide (CO2). Concentrations in the exhaust can be more than 80,000 parts per million. Concentrations so large fill the garage with carbon monoxide in a very short time even with the door open. Once the car is backed out of the garage and the garage door closed, large concentrations of gas still remain trapped in the garage. In a house built with an attached garage, part of the gas then seeps into the house where it remains for hours.
the conversion efficiencies are lower for idle conditions, probably due to the low inlet temperature, which can be a problem under traffic conditions where idle is a common situation, for example, at congested arterials and for long period stops at traffic lights or at intersections. This problem is increased in the first seconds of a cold start where the vehicle catalyst has not reach its normal operating conditions and the mixture can be rich[/i]
CARB does not like CO, the smog formation reaction goes like this, CO + 2O2 + sunlight = O3 (ozone, bad) + CO2.
Hows this, we both lock ourselves in garages with a car running, you with a IDI, me with a brand new PZEV vehicle, first guy to die looses :lol: ;-) I kid I kid!
Quote from: "jackbombay"New cars have very low CO emissions, a new car might kill you due to O2 depletion, but from CO poisoning it would take a very long time, probably not ever.New cars still have to light off the catalytic converter for it to function, and while that rich mixture is being sent through the cat HC and CO emissions spike. In fact most of the pollution from a gasser is during a cold (emissions) start up. Did you read the page I linked?
Here's a paper from 2006 that illustrates poor (~35%) CO conversion efficiency at idle, which would definitely translate into a dead vehicle operator in an enclosed garage, albeit at some later time compared to a vehicle built when emissions standards were lower.
Quote from: "lyenyoureye"Here's a paper from 2006 that illustrates poor (~35%) CO conversion efficiency at idle, which would definitely translate into a dead vehicle operator in an enclosed garage, albeit at some later time compared to a vehicle built when emissions standards were lower. So we're in agreement then
I've searched and searched and read countless threads but am struggling to find a mTDI solution that REALLY works.When you dig you uncover little problems and issues with all of them, smoke, starting, lack of power etcAnybody have a 100% solution yet, if so what is the recipe? or will the mTDI remain a flawed compromise?
Quote from: "regcheeseman"I've searched and searched and read countless threads but am struggling to find a mTDI solution that REALLY works.When you dig you uncover little problems and issues with all of them, smoke, starting, lack of power etcAnybody have a 100% solution yet, if so what is the recipe? or will the mTDI remain a flawed compromise?Well here you go the 5cyl M-TDI in a eurovan we just finished.running really well. videos to prove it.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyhqGmoIUP4
and then drives away .......... very slowly ;-)