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Our Trip to Costa Rica + Tips on How to Survive an Earthquake

January 15th, 2009

To survive a 6+ Richter Scale earthquake first you have to make sure you don’t fall down. Keep your balance. Once the initial earthquake is over make sure to run out of the structure you were in and get to a safe place. In an ideal situation the staff of the resort at which you are staying will direct you to a safe and covered place, triage, and distribute food and water to everyone.

If you are at a resort in Costa Rica you may have to do just a little more to make it through because the resort staff may just decide to say something to the effect of “screw those tourists”; things like scavenging through the wreckage of restaurants and rooms for food and water — and toilet paper — in the dark, carrying firewood to make your own fire, and using as much charm as possible to convince some other tourists to let you sleep in their rented van. That evening you should then try to make arrangements for a helicopter transport — at any price — with virtually no levels of cellular service. When that doesn’t work you should then try to sleep in the van parked on the side of the cliff while it rocks back and forth quite regularly from aftershocks.

Eventually the next day, after not sleeping and sitting in relative terror the entire night before, you should then wait patiently for your $850 helicopter to show up for half of the day. While you wait you should eat the pineapples you scrounged, drink the remaining water and Coca-Cola, enjoy a cold Hershey’s bar (kept cool in the small cooler you picked up in the destroyed restaurant), and watch as the helicopters continually take out other people and leave you at the defunct resort. By some stroke of luck or through sheer force of will you will find another resort-owner-provided helicopter that can seat three out of the four people in your group and you take advantage.

The remaining person in your group should then get taken by four-wheeler across the ravaged countryside to meet up with the rest of the party.

The Red Cross should be in place by now, providing transportation for your party, sitting with luggage by the roadside, to a nearby refugee center. If your eyesight is good you should then accidentally bump into your travel agent’s driver and wrangle a ride back to San Jose where you then hook up with another driver to take you three hours to your next hotel on the Pacific coast. At that hotel you should immediately take a shower, eat, and crash on a comfortable bed.

When you return to the States you should then swear off eco-travel for at least a few years and stick to locations with minimal seismic activity.


Here’s where we were:

MAP

Here are some news articles about the earthquake:

Reuters
China Post
CNN

And here’s the room we were supposed to stay in (before the earthquake made that all moot):


Blah, Pictures, Prius, Trips , , ,

Toyota debunks the Hummer vs Prius myth

September 23rd, 2007

For those that don’t know both Agnes and I drive Toyota Prius hybrids. Hers is a 2006 and mine is a 2005. I was a Prius zealot before I even owned one, but once we got the 2005 Agnes became one as well. We’ve even convinced a few friends to go the hybrid route when they purchased a new vehicle.

Here’s a [nerdy] picture of us and our cars:

Us and our Prii/Priuses

I could go on and on about why the Prius is probably the best car for most people but here’s a short list:

It is much larger than you’d think. It’s comparable to the pre-2006 Camry in interior space.
It gets incredible gas mileage. I’ve never had a tank under 45 MPG.
It’s reasonably priced, with models that start at $22,000.
It’s a Toyota.

About the only downside of owning a Prius is that I’m constantly being challenged by people with the “latest news” about why my purchase was a mistake, not actually green, etc. The anti-Prius crowd can be downright nasty at times, with their hatred of my car going past a simple disagreement and bordering on psychosis. It’s like the anti-hybrid people want to make me ashamed to drive a Prius while they run me off the road in their Chevy Avalanches.
I can thank the Detroit-funded shill CNW Research — the “Research” in the name being used loosely due to their questionable methods and findings — for the latest round of “proof” for the anti-hybrid. Basically the CNW report tried to say that from production through useful life the GMC Hummer H3 was a much “greener” vehicle than the Toyota Prius. While the findings in this “report” flew in the face of reason and common sense, local news affiliates were quick to republish the findings as fact and muddy the waters.

Thankfully Toyota debunked that myth.

From Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy View newsletter:

HEARD THE ONE ABOUT THE HUMMER?

Some readers of Hybrid Synergy View say they’ve heard about a report that claims a Hummer H3 sport utility vehicle uses less energy per mile driven than a Toyota Prius sedan. Not surprisingly, Prius fans who take pride in their cars’ energy efficiency are confused by this claim.


The report, published earlier this year by CNW Marketing Research, Inc., is titled “Dust to Dust: The Energy Cost of New Vehicles From Concept to Disposal.” It is said to measure in dollars and cents all the energy used in creating, building, operating and disposing of each vehicle over its entire lifetime. The report says a Prius costs $3.25 per mile to operate, versus just $1.95 a mile for the Hummer H3.

In May, a response from the Pacific Institute said of the CNW report, “The little supporting evidence that it has released suggests that the contentions in the report are, at best, unproven, and are likely wrong: the result of faulty analysis, untenable assumptions, manipulation and misuse of facts and data, numerical mischaracterization, and inadequate review.”

Because of its remarkable claims, however, the CNW report has been circulated widely and quoted in the media, continuing to spur questions from consumers.

Vehicle life and lifetime miles
For example, the Prius is assumed in this report to be driven only about 9200 miles a year, and to have a service life of less than 12 years and 109,000 miles. CNW assumes the average Hummer H3 will travel 207,000 miles over a lifetime of 15-plus years. The H1, incidentally, is assumed to have a lifetime of nearly 35 years, with 379,000 total miles.

According to data from the New Vehicle Consumer Study by Maritz Research, Prius owners plan to drive their vehicles an average of over 14,600 miles per year. And if Prius hybrids last only the 12 years assumed by CNW Marketing Research, Inc. — also an unsupportable assumption, given the substantially greater service lives of other Toyota vehicles — they would still rack up more than 175,000 miles in their lifetime.

Production costs versus operating costs
Using another puzzling assumption, the CNW report seems to assign the majority of a vehicle’s lifetime energy input to its design, development and production. We turn again to the Pacific Institute, which cites five independent studies showing that the operation of a vehicle is responsible for at least 73 percent and as much as 90 percent of its lifetime energy cost.

One of these studies, from the Argonne National Laboratory, is quoted as concluding that “around 74% of all hybrid and internal combustion vehicle energy use comes from the operation of the vehicle.”

Pacific Institute quotes the MIT study “On the Road in 2020″ as saying that a comprehensive life-cycle energy analysis found that “80% to 90% of all energy was used in the operation stage, 7% to 12% in the materials production stage, and the remainder in vehicle assembly, distribution, and disposal.”

So, with lifetime energy cost divided by lifetime miles, as in the CNW report, Prius’s per-mile energy input would be substantially better than is shown in that report, and better than that of a Hummer.

Our method of measurement
Toyota, meanwhile, employs its own standard to measure each new vehicle’s environmental “footprint.” Toyota’s Eco-VAS, or Eco-Vehicle Assessment System, is a tool for predicting and reducing the environmental impact of its vehicles. It also measures the energy required in a vehicle’s production and operating stages, but goes beyond analysis to provide a framework for design changes that improve environmental performance.

Toyota’s engineers use Eco-VAS all through the process of design and development and leading to production — measuring a vehicle according to six critical standards: fuel efficiency, exhaust emissions, external vehicle noise, lifetime environmental impact, recyclability and the reduction of substances of concern.

In design and production, these standards lead to the replacement of hexavalent chromium, lead and other substances of concern, lower the use of in-plant energy, and employ some plastic parts made from agricultural products rather than petrochemicals.

In the operating stage of a vehicle’s life, Eco-VAS improves fuel efficiency, produces fewer greenhouse gases and smog components, and cuts the impact of batteries, tires, oil and parts used in maintenance.

And, in the recycling and disposal phase, Eco-VAS standards improve the collection and reuse of recyclable materials, provide for easier dismantling and prevent the production of harmful waste.

The bottom line
The people at Toyota are no strangers to environmental awareness and to the positive changes that benefit both our consumers and the world they inhabit. With Eco-VAS, we’re taking giant steps to do even better.

And Prius owners, knowing the facts about the gentle environmental impact of their cars, continue to be proud of the choice they’ve made.


Editor’s note: Readers interested in CNW’s full 458-page report may find it at:
http://cnwmr.com/nss-folder/automotiveenergy/DUST%20PDF%20VERSION.pdf
The Pacific Institute response can be seen at:
www.pacinst.org/topics/integrity_of_science/case_studies/hummer_vs_prius.pdf
The Summer 2006 Hybrid Synergy View article on Eco-VAS is available at: http://www.toyota.com/html/hybridsynergyview/2006/summer/ecovas.html

Prius

Hybrid Batteries Q&A

October 18th, 2006

From Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy Drive site:

Questions for the hybrid battery expert
A big part of the “magic” that makes hybrid vehicles work involves high-voltage battery technology. So, it’s natural that many of the questions Toyota and its dealers receive are about hybrid batteries. Hybrid Synergy View put questions about batteries to Gary E. Smith, national service technology manager at Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.

Q: What do hybrid batteries look like, and how do they work?

Gary Smith: Toyota’s high-voltage hybrid batteries are collections of prismatic modules in strong protective cases bolted under or behind the rear seats. In a current-generation Prius, the battery case contains 168 1.2V batteries in groups or modules of six that are slightly different in shape but not much larger than the batteries in an 18-volt cordless electric drill. The entire pack, which includes some relays, solenoids and the metal case, measures about 14 by 36 inches, and is eight inches high. You might picture a suitcase weighing 110 pounds. Because the storage space is different in a Highlander hybrid, its batteries are in three smaller cases. So, picture three attach? cases with a total weight about the same as the case in the Prius.

These nickel-metal hydride batteries are charged by an internal combustion engine (ICE) driven generator and/or by regenerative braking that captures power from deceleration and braking.

Q: Do they ever run out of power?

GS: No. A computer makes sure the batteries never discharge completely. They never fill completely, either.

Q: Are they charged at the factory?

GS: Yes, they need to have enough of a charge to start the engine the first time. After that, the batteries are charged by the vehicle’s systems. Every Toyota hybrid also has a battery similar to the one in a conventionally powered car, but it’s used only for 12-volt accessories and to power the vehicle’s computers.

Q: Do the high-voltage batteries ever need to be checked or serviced by the owner or by a dealer?

GS: No, there is no scheduled maintenance for the batteries.

Q: How long do the high-voltage batteries last?

GS: We designed them to last for the life of the vehicle. We’re aware of owners who have racked up a quarter-million miles without replacing the batteries.

Q: What would it cost to replace a complete battery pack?

GS: Less than $3000, plus labor.

Read more…

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