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-   -   Have gas prices affected you? (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=8958)

elSicomoro 08-18-2005 03:34 PM

In the past year:

--Gas has gone up 60 cents for me (it was around $2/gal a year ago in Philly...it's currently $2.589 in St. Louis)
--I have a new car (2003 Malibu) that is not as fuel-efficient as my old cars (1994 Escort, 1995 Metro)
--I've gotten a delivery job

I put out about $180-200/month in fuel costs. A year ago, I was probably spending about $60-80/month. But I'm not complaining...it's the price I pay to do what I do. I don't like the prices, but we're still not paying as much as we were in 1983. *shrugs*

Clodfobble 08-18-2005 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sycamore
...but we're still not paying as much as we were in 1983.

You beat me to it, syc. People who obsess over gas prices drive me nuts. I have a friend who will drive five miles out of her way to save $0.15 a gallon. Even if she weren't driving any further for that gas, she's only saving $4.50 per fill-up, or $27 a month if she fills up every 5 days. That's less than one meal at a restaurant, or one-fifth of their monthly cable bill.

Gas prices are the epitome of "penny-wise, pound-foolish" to me. I don't even pay attention to the price, ever. It is what it is. McDonald's costs more now than it did a year ago too; it's called inflation. If you need to save money, most people have plenty of other places they could cut back on.

(And not to turn this into a political argument, but "Gas prices are too high!" and "No blood for oil!" are mutually exclusive. You can't bitch about both.)[/threadjack]

lumberjim 08-18-2005 05:59 PM

I took a V8 Titan this time around for a demo. 60 miles ONE way to work. $52 last night to fill it. With a range of approx 340 miles, that's about 5 1/2 trips to or from work. I'll fill it again Saturday on the way in.

Weep for me.

I'll be taking a 6 speed Sentra SER next time to average out the cost.

what, I won't!?

xoxoxoBruce 08-18-2005 06:29 PM

A reminder...well two reminders. :biggrin:

1- the fuel in your tank not only feeds the engine it's a coolant for the electric fuel pump that's also in the tank. So try not to let the tank get too low, especially in hot weather.

2- You can get gas in Iraq for 10 or 20 cents a gallon. Of course we're buying it in Kuwait for much more and trucking it in at a cost of $millions every month.

marichiko 08-18-2005 09:53 PM

Well, here's my vast age showing, but I remember when gas was maybe .35 cents a gallon. Granted, everything else was cheaper back then too, but there's still no way around the fact that gas prices are taking a higher percentage of our money than they used to.

I miss my old Explorer, but it was a gas hog (Patrick, you have my sympathy). My little Toyota RAV that I now drive gets easily double the mileage of the Explorer, thank God!

At $2.00/gal I could buy a week's worth of gas for $30. Prices in my town have now gone up to about $2.70/gal, so I now pay $40.50. That's an extra $42.00 a month. If you are on a tight budget, that $42.00 extra hurts.

mricytoast 08-18-2005 10:11 PM

People are complaining about gas prices in the U.S. when it is generally three times higher in Europe to the gallon. But they get along fine, don't they? I really hope gas prices continue to rise, even exponentially, because that will finally shock this country into being more enviromentally concious/thoughtful.

2.70 a gallon here as well, also doesn't seem to reduce driving people.

marichiko 08-18-2005 10:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mricytoast
People are complaining about gas prices in the U.S. when it is generally three times higher in Europe to the gallon. But they get along fine, don't they?

In Europe they have this invention called efficient systems of mass transportation. A lot of 'em use this object of transportation called the "train." Amazing invention that. When I visit my family in Switzerland, the ones who live in the city have electric street cars that stop practically at their doorsteps and run 24/7. The street cars have nice direct routes to the train station. The trains take off ever 10 minutes for everywhere in Switzerland and the rest of Europe that you can imagine, and places that you can't imagine either.

Stuff like that in the US? That will be the day!

Scopulus Argentarius 08-18-2005 10:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bullitt
One of my buddies in Sweden told me the other day when we were talking about gas prices that he just laughs when Americans complain about gas prices. They're easily double what we pay

I'm happy he wins that contest. He can trump me on gas prices. I Hope he pays 10 times what I pay and enjoys the bragging rights. Crap, 100 times would work for me.

Scopulus Argentarius 08-18-2005 10:49 PM

I recently changed jobs. My new job is less than 5 miles from my house; I fuel up once every 2 weeks (or less if I travel little on weekends) vs. twice a week for the old place of employment.

Even with high prices, my fuel costs no longer take a considerable chunk of my after-tax pay.

melidasaur 08-18-2005 11:10 PM

the thing i hate most about gasoline is that it only has one use... you can't eat it, you can't drink it. I hate paying for things that don't have dual use. Even toilet paper has multiple functions... not just wiping your rear.

Bullitt 08-18-2005 11:16 PM

Anybody else heard about those guys who are rigging up hybrid cars with a bunch more batteries for +-$6,000, getting an estimated 250 mpg in the process? I can't imagine how paranoid EMT's would be around a wreck with that much juice goin through it.

LCanal 08-18-2005 11:19 PM

Yes, I'm really bummed out I used to be able to fill the truck for 50,000Rp = $5.25 but gas here has soared up to 2500Rp/litre = $1.05 a US gallon.
Now it cost's $9.50 for a fillup. I'm going diesel it's cheaper:lol:

wolf 08-19-2005 12:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bullitt
Anybody else heard about those guys who are rigging up hybrid cars with a bunch more batteries for +-$6,000, getting an estimated 250 mpg in the process? I can't imagine how paranoid EMT's would be around a wreck with that much juice goin through it.

There are apparently already protocols in place for cutting hybrid cars to bits with the jaws of life and that really cool big radial saw ...

Originally I'd heard the hybrids were quite dangerous to EMTs, but more recent information seems to indicate that's not entirely the case. If I hear anything further (the EMT who is a firefighter should be in work tomorrow) I'll let you guys know.

I have a car that gets around 18/gallon. While I admit that I seriously miss my 32 MPG sportscar, I am still only filling up two or three times per month. Put it on the gas co. card, throw money at it once a month ... minor, not major impact at this point.

LCanal 08-19-2005 01:40 AM

For fuel economy maybe one of these. At

http://www.smart.com/-snm-0144779740...70kwcdi%2epage

There is a sports version


http://www.smart.com/-snm-0144779740...hlights%2epage

And a Roadster

http://www.smart.com/-snm-0144779740...hlights%2epage

Undertoad 08-19-2005 07:23 AM

Apparently the extra battery guys are just getting extra non-gas miles in order to get to 250 MPG. They plug in at the end of their trip.


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