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I don't really care about how important realities are dealt with. What I do care about is resource depletion and environmental degradation. I am especially concerned that nobody wishes to put a cost on using the rapidly diminishing commons. We are approaching another tragedy of the commons and problems with automobile emissions and fuel usage are a sizable component. (Geezer, my taxes are really quite reasonable).
Apart from rush hours, most of the stuff is grossly underutilized.
Quote from: Geezer on 08/12/2010 01:48:16Apart from rush hours, most of the stuff is grossly underutilized. Which is why the Seattle-Tacoma trains only run during rush hour, and primarily in one direction.
"The problem is that for public transportation to be practical, there has to be access. I.E. A bus should go within 1/4 or 1/2 mile of every place in the city, and should do it from about 5AM to 2AM. "No it doesn't.Public transport IS practical. Just about everywhere has it. Practically none run that sort of schedule.
I've heard that California has had particularly strict emissions standards (for smog reduction) for a number of years, but I don;t know whether they are (now) any stricter than other States, or in fact Europe. They may have over-pushed the pollutant standards (particularly NOx) to the (further) detriment of mechanical efficiency.
Concerning railways, let me just say ... OUCH! [B)]No need to shove!! I'll have you know I've been thrown out of far better threads than this!
Anyway, back at the topic.Given the engine capacity, the RPM and the air temp and pressure you can convert from ppm to g/km anyway so who cares which one they quote?
So?You can still do the calculation. In both cases you would need to sum the result over the course of the driving cycle.A peak just measures "how bad is this engine at its worst?" which isn't a bad thing to know.