xcel
01-04-2009, 09:33 PM
From eighteen, down to three and now we have the winner. (cleanmpg.com/forums/showthread.php?p=177872)
http://www.cleanmpg.com/photos/data/501/2009_Honda_Civic_Hybrid1.jpgWayne Gerdes – CleanMPG (cleanmpg.com) – Jan. 4, 2009
2009 Honda Civic Hybrid – EPA rated at 40 mpgUS city, 45 mpgUS highway and 42mpgUS combined on the 08 EPA.
The membership and moderating staff votes have been tallied.
What a year. A special fuel efficient Diesel is finally available across the 50-states in the form of the world renowned VW Jetta TDI. The Toyota Prius has performed what seems like miracles from one coast to another with various media outlets seeing how one can achieve 99.9 + segments time and time again. Finally a sleeper of sorts, the Honda Civic Hybrid. Not only did most find it to be one of the most comfortable fuel efficient automobiles available but its recent achievement of 68.5 mpg across all 48-States in an early winter drive set it apart.
Why did we include models that have been on the market for as long as 5 years? Because little has changed across the entire fuel efficient model lineup to render many of the original 18-models obsolete. In fact, many of the models that have been on the market for years are still far better to own and drive than lesser models introduced within the past 6-months!
The initial 18 vehicle nominees included the following:
2009 BMW 118d
2009 Ford Escape Hybrid, Fiesta and Focus Econetic TDCi’s
2009 Honda Civic Hybrid, Civic iCDTi, Clarity and Fit
2009 Mazda2 CD
2010 Mitsubishi MiEV
2009 Nissan Altima Hybrid
2009 Smart ForTwo ED
2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid, Corolla, iQ and Prius
2009 VW Jetta TDI
Voting closed with the Jetta TDI, HCH-II and Prius-II (http://www.cleanmpg.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18323) surviving the initial round.
Round two not only highlighted the finalists in finer detail but also selected CleanMPG’s 2008 Green Car of the Year (http://www.cleanmpg.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18412).
http://www.cleanmpg.com/photos/data/501/CleanMPG_Car_of_the_Year.jpg
Let me be the first to introduce our 2008 “Green Car of the Year”, the 2009 Honda Civic Hybrid.
Voting results were as follows:
2009 HCH-II: (29/73)*.75 + (6/14)*.25 = 40.51%
2009 Prius-II: (26/73)*.75 + (4/14)*.25 = 33.86%
2009 VW Jetta TDI: (18/73)*.75 + (4/14)*.25 = 25.64%
Moderator votes
Kacey Green -- HCH-II: Originally embarrassed by the HCH-II which morphed to envy, and then to pride.
Laurieaw -- HCH-II: Honda seems to have been least affected by pushing FSPs are great for setting world records.
Lightfoot -- HCH-II: HCH's near-Prius FE and amazing emissions rating make it greenest to me.
Msantos -- HCH-II: This year definitely belongs to the HCH-II.
SlowHands -- HCH-II: This car proved its capabilities in several CleanMPG fuel economy events this year.
xcel -- HCH-II: Super Clean and most fuel efficient new car available in the US for highway driving.
Delta Flyer -- Prius-II: The tie-breaker is the PHEV conversion capability of the Prius.
Diamondlarry -- Prius-II: 100 mpg tank this summer clinches it.
Msirach -- Prius-II: Prius-II’s success tells me Toyota will continue to lead in fuel efficient vehicles.
Right Lane Cruiser -- Prius-II: Anyone can achieve great FE in a Prius-II.
Bestmapman -- TDI: It is a great car that even comes with a 6 speed manual transmission. Got to love that.
Brick -- TDI: I think that as a total package, the TDI is the most well-rounded of the bunch.
Lamebums -- TDI: You can drive 70 mph and still get 50 MPG, which is a huge plus.
PaleMelanesian -- TDI: Props to VW for going ahead with the diesel business, while others are hanging back.
With the 2008 Green Car of the Year now complete, it is time to consider which vehicles will be included in our 2009 Green Car of the Year to be selected in December of this year. Many of the initial 18 will still be on this year’s list with a few all-new vehicles that many of us simply cannot wait to read about and drive. Those vehicles will include the upcoming 39 mpgUS combined, 2009 Ford Fusion Hybrid and the upcoming 2009 Honda Insight-II and Prius-III.
http://www.cleanmpg.com/photos/data/501/2009_Honda_Civic_Hybrid1.jpgWayne Gerdes – CleanMPG (cleanmpg.com) – Jan. 4, 2009
2009 Honda Civic Hybrid – EPA rated at 40 mpgUS city, 45 mpgUS highway and 42mpgUS combined on the 08 EPA.
The membership and moderating staff votes have been tallied.
What a year. A special fuel efficient Diesel is finally available across the 50-states in the form of the world renowned VW Jetta TDI. The Toyota Prius has performed what seems like miracles from one coast to another with various media outlets seeing how one can achieve 99.9 + segments time and time again. Finally a sleeper of sorts, the Honda Civic Hybrid. Not only did most find it to be one of the most comfortable fuel efficient automobiles available but its recent achievement of 68.5 mpg across all 48-States in an early winter drive set it apart.
Why did we include models that have been on the market for as long as 5 years? Because little has changed across the entire fuel efficient model lineup to render many of the original 18-models obsolete. In fact, many of the models that have been on the market for years are still far better to own and drive than lesser models introduced within the past 6-months!
The initial 18 vehicle nominees included the following:
2009 BMW 118d
2009 Ford Escape Hybrid, Fiesta and Focus Econetic TDCi’s
2009 Honda Civic Hybrid, Civic iCDTi, Clarity and Fit
2009 Mazda2 CD
2010 Mitsubishi MiEV
2009 Nissan Altima Hybrid
2009 Smart ForTwo ED
2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid, Corolla, iQ and Prius
2009 VW Jetta TDI
Voting closed with the Jetta TDI, HCH-II and Prius-II (http://www.cleanmpg.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18323) surviving the initial round.
Round two not only highlighted the finalists in finer detail but also selected CleanMPG’s 2008 Green Car of the Year (http://www.cleanmpg.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18412).
http://www.cleanmpg.com/photos/data/501/CleanMPG_Car_of_the_Year.jpg
Let me be the first to introduce our 2008 “Green Car of the Year”, the 2009 Honda Civic Hybrid.
Voting results were as follows:
2009 HCH-II: (29/73)*.75 + (6/14)*.25 = 40.51%
2009 Prius-II: (26/73)*.75 + (4/14)*.25 = 33.86%
2009 VW Jetta TDI: (18/73)*.75 + (4/14)*.25 = 25.64%
Moderator votes
Kacey Green -- HCH-II: Originally embarrassed by the HCH-II which morphed to envy, and then to pride.
Laurieaw -- HCH-II: Honda seems to have been least affected by pushing FSPs are great for setting world records.
Lightfoot -- HCH-II: HCH's near-Prius FE and amazing emissions rating make it greenest to me.
Msantos -- HCH-II: This year definitely belongs to the HCH-II.
SlowHands -- HCH-II: This car proved its capabilities in several CleanMPG fuel economy events this year.
xcel -- HCH-II: Super Clean and most fuel efficient new car available in the US for highway driving.
Delta Flyer -- Prius-II: The tie-breaker is the PHEV conversion capability of the Prius.
Diamondlarry -- Prius-II: 100 mpg tank this summer clinches it.
Msirach -- Prius-II: Prius-II’s success tells me Toyota will continue to lead in fuel efficient vehicles.
Right Lane Cruiser -- Prius-II: Anyone can achieve great FE in a Prius-II.
Bestmapman -- TDI: It is a great car that even comes with a 6 speed manual transmission. Got to love that.
Brick -- TDI: I think that as a total package, the TDI is the most well-rounded of the bunch.
Lamebums -- TDI: You can drive 70 mph and still get 50 MPG, which is a huge plus.
PaleMelanesian -- TDI: Props to VW for going ahead with the diesel business, while others are hanging back.
With the 2008 Green Car of the Year now complete, it is time to consider which vehicles will be included in our 2009 Green Car of the Year to be selected in December of this year. Many of the initial 18 will still be on this year’s list with a few all-new vehicles that many of us simply cannot wait to read about and drive. Those vehicles will include the upcoming 39 mpgUS combined, 2009 Ford Fusion Hybrid and the upcoming 2009 Honda Insight-II and Prius-III.
