Diesel fights for traction with U.S. buyers

Apr 17, 2009 By Steven Cole Smith

Just like gasoline, diesel fuel has plummeted in price since last summer after reaching almost $5 a gallon. So now that diesel goes for about $2.25, sales of diesel-powered vehicles, which almost always get better mileage than their gas-powered counterparts, have risen, right?

"Wrong," said Bill Lieb, sales manager for a Florida Volkswagen dealership. "At least not here."

Lieb said when prices were $4 a gallon and diesel prices were even higher, "we had a waiting list for diesels. Now, with gas prices lower, people have gone back to their old buying habits -- trucks and SUVs and bigger cars. That's the way the American consumer is."

But there's still a loyal following for the more-efficient diesel, he said, especially since the introduction of clean diesel fuel last year, which means new diesel-powered cars are essentially as "green" as gas-powered models.

"Probably 60 percent of the customers who buy a Volkswagen diesel have owned one before," said Lieb, who has sold Volkswagens since 1974. Many diesel customers, he said, have either lived in or frequently visited Europe, where 53 percent of vehicles are powered by diesel, compared with about 5 percent in the United States.

Bill Settle, 76, who owns an insurance agency, is among those diesel drivers. Settle, his family and his business have multiple diesel-powered Volkswagens, including a 2003 Jetta he drives, and a 2005 Golf used by the company.

"We get 48 miles per gallon in the Golf," he said, "and between 51 and 53 in the Jetta. My wife drives a hybrid, and we love it, but we can't get it to produce as good a mileage as we get from the Jetta."

Volkswagen is an acknowledged U.S. leader in diesel-powered cars, along with Mercedes-Benz. The least-expensive in America is the Volkswagen Jetta diesel, which is rated by the at 31 mpg in the city, 41 mpg on the highway. A comparable gasoline-powered Jetta is rated at 21 mpg city, 30 mpg highway.

And the EPA has acknowledged the current tests for fuel mileage often understate diesel performance: Volkswagen's own mileage tests show the Jetta diesel can get 38 mpg in the city.

Diesel engines have much higher compression ratios inside the cylinders, and consequently are beefier and more expensive to build than comparable gasoline engines. (Base price for the gas-powered Jetta is $17,515; the turbocharged diesel-powered Jetta starts at $22,270.)

But diesels are considered more durable, and resale value is typically higher, as well.

At the height of their popularity last summer, Lieb said diesel-powered cars were selling with no discounts or incentives. Now, "They have the same incentives and discounts as regular models."

Quite a few of the proposed diesel-powered passenger vehicles scheduled to arrive here soon have been delayed, mostly because of economic pressures on the manufacturers, who are reluctant to take a chance with an unproven product.

"The economy has definitely delayed some of the dozen or so exciting new products we were expecting for 2010," said Allen Schaffer, executive director of the Maryland-based Diesel Technology Forum, an information clearinghouse.

Among those delayed: diesel engines for Acura and Honda cars, as well as light-duty diesels for Ford and General Motors half-ton pickups. BMW has introduced a diesel-powered 3-Series sedan, though, as well as a diesel-powered X5 sport utility vehicle.

"The economic problems this past year have sort of pressed the 'reset' button for a lot of consumers," Schaffer said. "And we think they are looking more at long-term value and durability and service than ever before. And that should mean a good future for power."

___

(c) 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).
Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at www.orlandosentinel.com/
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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User comments : 7

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dirk_bruere
3 / 5 (1) Apr 17, 2009
I'm going to stick with diesel from now on. Not only is it more mpg but it's safer and more reliable in wet weather. There's also not much of a performance hit either with modern engines.
JLMEALER
2.3 / 5 (3) Apr 17, 2009
Glad to see this is now news.

Mealer American Motors Corporation has a 100 mpg turbocharged diesel (and bio-diesel, cooking grease, waste oil capable from the factory) midsized full powered "Bridge Vehicle" that will ease our buyers into the shock and aawe of owning one or more of our Flagship vehicles just two to three years later.
The FV is a non fossil fuel powered, non EV that will also power your home when it is parked!
No eco nuts. No oil funded terrorists. No more depending on greedy power companies.

No more BS... and this is cool.

Mealer American Motors Corporation.
One day you will drive a MEALER.

Watch for us, and get with us or step out of the way. Let's pull the Aemrican economy up to worlwide #1 standards again.

John Lewis Mealer
Mealer Companies LLC
Crossrip
2 / 5 (1) Apr 18, 2009
Where exactly is Aemrica?
Doug_Huffman
3 / 5 (1) Apr 18, 2009
I'll continue to stick with diesel and specifically with my VW Jetta TDI. When this one wears our then hopefully I'll be old enough to tolerate a Lupo's lack of performance.

As to the 'meal' (contrary to the 'meal' done in remembrance of Him), no biological energy source can exceed 1350 Watts-meter^-2 without indebting the future just as bio-renewable fossil fuel has done.

Who fails to do arithmetic is doomed to nonsense.
LuckyBrandon
5 / 5 (1) Apr 18, 2009
Dirk-what the hell deos the engine being diesel or not have to do with wet weather. Last I checked, your engine doesn't touch the road unless you REEEALLY screwed up your car :)

That mealer brand needs a new name...don't stick with Ford's method of naming the damned company after yourself...you gotta give it a catchy name...GreenGo for instance (get it...gringo) :D
Lord_jag
not rated yet Apr 20, 2009
I'll continue to stick with diesel and specifically with my VW Jetta TDI. When this one wears our then hopefully I'll be old enough to tolerate a Lupo's lack of performance.

As to the 'meal' (contrary to the 'meal' done in remembrance of Him), no biological energy source can exceed 1350 Watts-meter^-2 without indebting the future just as bio-renewable fossil fuel has done.

Who fails to do arithmetic is doomed to nonsense.


Does geothermal energy indebt the future?



barakn
1 / 5 (1) Apr 27, 2009
Sure, removal of geothermal energy causes the continental crust to cool, condense, and sink into the ocean.

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