This little gem from Sacramento’s NBC affiliate KCRA--Pain At The Pump: Government Gas Secrets
I am so sick and tired of every two-bit news outlet in the United States trying to come up with “secret government conspiracy” crap. It’s stupid, and demeaning, and does nothing but expose the superciliousness and rank stupidity of the people who deign to tell us they should be trusted to find information for us.
This whole story has precious little to do with anything other than someone trying to make themselves look like the next Woodward and Bernstein, but the net effect makes the reporter and the station look like a bunch of Ted Baxters and Les Nessmans.
To begin:
The government has been keeping a secret about automobiles under wraps for the past 30 years.
Okay, I have to give them props--if you’re gonna lie, start lying right out of the gate. The government has NOT been keeping a secret about gas mileage ratings. Just because people don’t LOOK for the information--EVEN THOUGH IT’S PRINTED ON EVERY CAR STICKER MADE, doesn’t mean it’s a COVERUP. You could just as easily say that the government has been keeping a secret about income tax filing. Did you know that if you aren’t going to be able to file on time, that you STILL HAVE TO SEND IN ANY MONEY YOU MIGHT OWE!? Why, it’s a COVERUP! WHO KNEW ABOUT THIS!? Hmm? What’s that? Everyone who can READ knows this? Oh, well--it’s STILL A COVERUP, because I’M TOO BLOODY STUPID TO READ IT FOR MYSELF! LIES! ALL LIES!Reporter Michelle Meredith teamed up with Consumer Reports to explain why your car probably does not get the mileage advertised.
How about an expose about how the hair coloring picture on the box doesn’t ever look like the hair color on your hair. LIES! ALL LIES!The Consumer Reports' auto test track in Connecticut looks like it could be a new theme park in Orlando.
OOOOhhhh--exotic ORLANDO! Where there are no lies.And when it comes to testing cars, Consumer Reports leaves no stone unturned, no lug nut loose. And here's the question Consumer Reports set out to answer -- does your car get the gas mileage promised on the showroom sticker.
What stone-overturning has to do with car testing is left unanswered. IT MUST BE A COVERUP! But one point to make--the sticker with the mileage ratings IS NOT A FRIGGIN’ PROMISE, YOU PEA-BRAINED TWIT! It is a standardized rating based upon laboratory tests, intended to give some semblance for a basis of comparison across a variety of makes and models. But it is NOT a guarantee, warranty, promise, agreement, covenant, assurance or any other synonym MS Word can come up with.It's the mileage you probably used to decide if the car fit your monthly budget.
Doubtful, since most people budget for car purchases primarily on how much their monthly lease or loan payment will be. Some may look at mileage to the exclusion of all else, but if anyone does, it’s not in evidence in this particular news story. BECAUSE OF THE LIES!First, Meredith took a look at how carmakers come up with these numbers because you could be in for a big surprise. The guidelines for the tests were set by the federal government decades ago, in the late 1970s. Gerald Ford was president and disco was king.
And local television news reporters were still seen as objective gatherers of information. You know, like Ron Burgundy.And under these guidelines by the Environmental Protection Agency, carmakers are allowed to test miles per gallon by running the vehicle not on the road, but on what's essentially a treadmill for cars.
Yes, it’s called a chassis dynamometer. It’s a big set of steel cylinders that the car's driven wheels sit on and the car is held stationary, so that it can be hooked up to all the test equipment in the lab to--now, get ready for it--TO ELIMINATE POSSIBLE VARIABLES RELATED TO ROAD SURFACE, such as temperature, friction coefficient, and moisture. In other words, it’s SCIENTIFIC. I know it must hurt your pretty little brain to think about all those big machineries and such, but there’s a REASON for all of that, and it’s not to cover up LIES! Oh, and by the way--carmakers aren’t “allowed” to run them on a chassis dyno--they are REQUIRED TO BY LAW. Which, in fairness, does require READING, and therefore is prima fascia evidence of a COVERUP OF MASSIVE PROPORTION! HOW DARE THE GOVERNMENT REQUIRE THAT WE READ ANYTHING! THEY DON’T TEACH THAT IN J-SCHOOL!Ahem. Sorry.
During an EPA spot check, the car ran with no air conditioning, no inclines or hills, no wind resistance and at speeds no greater than 60 mph.
Can you guess why? Because not every air conditioner is the same; to turn on the compressor and allow it to cycle would introduce another variable into the test. Hills (or inclines, which are somehow different from hills, but still somehow uppy or downy sorta, and allow us to express shock that not only are hills excluded, BUT INCLINES, TOO!!) can be taken into account through variable resistance on the dynamometer rollers, but in the end, when you’re simply trying to come up with a standardized test, you don’t have to introduce every possible scenario, including things like aerodynamic drag, or high road speed, only a sufficient number of criteria to give a repeatable, verifiable basis of comparison across a range of vehicles.There's hardly anything real world about it, but it gives carmakers what they want -- the highest possible miles per gallon to put on that sticker.
It’s not intended to be “real world.” It’s intended to be a lab test for broad comparison, AND NOTHING MORE. That’s why it says your mileage will vary. And the test was hardly the result of nothing but carmaker input--the EPA developed it and monitors the administration of it. Now, there ARE carmakers who develop their cars to excel on the EPA test--Chevy in particular has been good at this, with a small solenoid-activated shifter mechanism on manual transmission Corvettes (and it used to be on Camaros) that will, under certain exacting specifications matching the EPA test, cause the shifter to bypass 2nd and 3rd gear on the upshift from 1st, and go into 4th. This is intended to give a better mileage number, and indeed it does--but here’s the deal--IT WORKS IN REAL WORLD DRIVING, TOO! Corvettes get excellent fuel mileage even outside the laboratory, and part of it is the built-in device to short-shift when you’re not hard on the throttle."People are going into showrooms, they're looking at that sticker that says miles per gallon and they're saying, 'Oh it get goods [sic] miles per gallon,'" said Consumer Reports' David Champion. "In reality, they're being cheated."
No, if this is what’s happening, in reality they are just not being informed consumers. They see a number, and refuse to do any more research. I guarantee you, consumers are being cheated MUCH more by predatory lending practices and shady lease agreements than are being “cheated” because their car doesn’t get the mileage that’s on the sticker. And once more--the sticker is NOT A GUARANTEE!Consumer Reports conducts their test on a track and in the real world.
And it has been since the 1930s. Which is a good and noble thing, and if you have ever once picked up a copy, you could see their mileage ratings for the cars they test, and get a better idea of how your car might perform IF YOU DRIVE IT LIKE THEY DO. First, they put them through a simulated city course. Next the highway -- a real highway. For the third test, they take the car out on a 150-mile day trip throughout Connecticut.
All the while, a special miles per gallon meter is ticking away. Their results? Many numbers you see on those stickers are off way off -- one as much as 50 percent..
For example, Chrysler says the four-wheel drive diesel version of the Jeep Liberty gets 22 mpg in the city. Consumer Reports tested it and found it got more like 11 mpg.
Honda claims its hybrid Civic sedan gets 48 mpg in the city. Consumer Reports found it only gets 26 mpg -- a 46 percent difference.
Chevy's Trailblazer EXT four-wheel drive is supposed to get 15 mpg in the city. For Consumer Reports, it was 9 mpg.
"It's an unrealistic sales and marketing tool that they are actually using. They are saying you're going to get 35 mpg, and you're really only going to get 21," Champion said.
Okay, then let’s do away with EPA testing. That would be the simplest thing--we did fine without it for years.But the urge to regulate is simply overwhelming in Washington, and amongst a certain subset of the population who hate cars and everything they stand for. Somehow we can't let the free market, i.e., Consumer Reports, be a good enough standard for measuring economy. Its only usefulness and good is in being used to try to make the government look bad.
Anyway, don't like carmakers gaming the system? Elimate the opportunity.
Why is this allowed? Meredith asked the EPA's director of transportation.
SPEAK THE TRUTH TO POWER, MEREDITH!! "We cannot have a perfect test," said Margo Oge.
Oge said for so long, nobody really complained. Meanwhile, everything has changed.
"All the cars today have air conditioning, which was not the case in the mid-80s, and we drive at higher speeds because we are allowed to drive a higher speeds. And technology has changed," Oge said.
Anyway, how about this for "real world" testing--how about loading down a car with the stuff we usually carry--several hundred pounds of junk in the trunk, a bunch of kids, some car seats, a stroller. What about hauling a boat, or an ATV trailer? Or bikes on the roof? --WHY DON’T THEY INCLUDE THAT!?
Because it’s a CONSPIRACY!
Look, everyone is going to get different mileage, and although you can jigger the test mechanism to deliver lower mileage, in the end, it STILL won’t cover everything.
Carmakers know their number is up. Several have been to Consumer Reports' test track to see how they test real world conditions.
Which means they’ll just start using Consumer Reports data as a marketing tool instead of EPA ratings. But you still won’t get what THEY get unless you drive exactly like they do. Any variation, and you’re result will vary. "I think it's desperately time for a change," Champion said.
The EPA has said a change is coming in time for the 2008 models, but is that soon enough? Consumers need real world tests with real world numbers now because with the price of gas constantly climbing, the real world has become a very ugly place.
As for the real world becoming a very ugly place, well, once we start mocking idiotic local television reporters, we can always hope they’ll stop clogging up the airwaves with such meaningless chaff and start doing something important--like not driving gigantic gas-guzzling satellite trucks and SUVs to every cat-stuck-in-a-tree story.
The EPA said even though the new test will reflect more real-world conditions, there is no perfect test.
Yes, they did say that--just a few paragraphs earlier. Must be some kind of secret government SECRET REDUNDANCY RAY.For more information and for a list of the most fuel efficient cars and SUVs, check out Consumer Reports' special report A Guide To Stretching Your Fuel Dollars.
Hey, finally! Some useful information!And yes, this did strike a nerve, because it's silly, fatuous, and useless. I would really like to believe I could expect more, although I don't know why I should.
Posted by Terry Oglesby at May 9, 2006 10:21 AMWow, possums can do a righteous fisking! Who knew?
Posted by: mike hollihan at May 9, 2006 11:19 AMWhoa there Big Possum! Do you feel better now? Maybe you should go crawl under the porch and take a nap.
Posted by: Nate at May 9, 2006 11:26 AMI'm just getting warmed up.
Posted by: Terry Oglesby at May 9, 2006 11:29 AMMay I suggest something? Type this up in real letter form (as opposed to righteous fisking possum form) and send it in to them. Outline every spot where the reporter was ridiculous, and see if they have the nerve to respond.
I doubt they will, because the truth seems to be the refuge of cranks and possum, not for the newsbunnies.
Posted by: Skinnydan at May 9, 2006 11:32 AMHaving done what you suggest in the past on other issues and never receiving any sort of response is one of the reasons I started a blog. I can rant and rave all day to them and all they have to do is hit delete. At least this way, other people can see that their reports might have a shade of idiocy about them. Or worse.
As a very wise man once told me, "you can't make a jerk feel like one." I can think of few organizations who operate with the jerkish impunity of news organizations, and I am sorry to say that it has still not gotten to the point that one angry viewer (or reader) letter will have much effect.
Posted by: Terry Oglesby at May 9, 2006 11:53 AMWith rare exceptions, news people are ignorant louts. Gas is "expensive" so there must be someone responsible. According to the EPA, my pickup should get around 15 mpg in town. I get 18-19. Your mileage may vary.
Of course, gasoline is still one of the least expenses of operating a car or truck. I will spend about $1650 on gas this year. Depreciation will be more and my truck is getting up in years.
Posted by: Larry Anderson at May 9, 2006 12:58 PMHopefully, one day there will be a lucrative market for unignorant, unloutish local news. I know for sure that if the blogosphere had been around when CBS did their hatchet job on Audi, or when Dateline blew up Chevy trucks, those stories would have turned out much differently.
Posted by: Terry Oglesby at May 9, 2006 01:11 PMI assume you are talking about the "unintended" accelleration of the beloved Audi 5000? More like unattended or inattentive accelleration. I showed an Audi owner that his car would not move with the accellerator on the floor and the brake held fairly lightly. I then showed him that the brake would stop the car from 60 mph even if you held the accellerator to the floor. He still believed "60 Minutes" over me.
Posted by: Larry Anderson at May 9, 2006 01:53 PMYes indeed, that is the one. They nearly ruined a company and based it on trumped up testing. Car and Driver did an expose of their methods many years back, and basically they had to disable the brake system in order to make the cars perform as people had said they did.
And I've noted before the phenomenon you cite--many folks don't believe it, but brakes on cars (modern cars, at least) have more horsepower than the engine.
Posted by: Terry Oglesby at May 9, 2006 02:08 PMI feel cheated by Consumer Reports. Their test procedures for gas mileage do indeed vary, and they haven't been that open about it. Around year 2000 their reported highway test gas mileage took a dive -- I suppose they wanted it to be more "realistic", but how about telling us in more detail what test procedures are used.
Changing the test procedures makes it hard to do in-depth comparisons. I am driving a 10-year-old Taurus -- how do I compare it to a brand new Ford Five Hundred? Am I going to be disappointed when I drive the new car home? Or does Consumer Reports assume that people don't keep cars 10 years?
Why doesn't Consumer reports include the EPA numbers along with their own gas mileage test? Do they feel consumers will be confused when given more data points under more varied test conditions?
Posted by: Paul Milenkovic at July 15, 2006 09:44 AMI got to thinking about it, and think it really would be nice if there was a compendium of various test numbers from all the various media sources, as well as the EPA numbers. Every car magazine out there does something a bit different, so it might not be one of those things where you can make direct comparisons, but you could at least get an idea of the high and low and average. As you say, more data points would be beneficial.
Posted by: Terry Oglesby at July 17, 2006 08:09 AM