• Kokesh@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    How is that more ecologically friendly? Driving 30kmh takes more fuel! And the cars will be running for longer time.

    • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I don’t think they mentioned ecological benefits, but accelerating and braking is a lot more inefficient than driving a constant speed. And since there’s no way you’ll be able to sustain any speed higher than 30 in most city areas in Ireland it makes sense.

      • bob_lemon@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        Technically it does. Engines are usually less optimized for driving 30 compared to 50, which causes them to use more fuel for the same distance.

        But a slightly higher fuel consumption is easily offset by reduced noise and increased safety (for everyone).

        • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          You need close to three times (2.78) the energy for accelerating to 50 instead of 30.
          If you have to brake, that energy gets converted to heat.
          Rinse and repeat.
          Especially in urban areas where there’s alot of acceleration/deceleration - or just acceleration with different algebraic signs - more speed means more fuel per distance.

        • JensSpahnpasta@feddit.org
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          2 days ago

          There are several graphs floating around showing the fuel consumption at 30 compared to 50 with different gears. It depends on your car and the gear used if 30 uses more fuel than 50. If your car uses more fuel for slower speeds and for such a common speed as 30, the manufacturer is an idiot. There are so many 30 zones in Europe that it really is not an argument against them that a car manufacturer can’t build proper cars.

          And since we are also switching to electric cars, that problem will go away in the next decade or two.

          • gian
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            1 day ago

            If your car uses more fuel for slower speeds and for such a common speed as 30, the manufacturer is an idiot.

            Or the manufacturer just optimized the engine and the gearbox to be more efficent at a certain speed.

            In the end the consumption is tied to the rpm of the engine, if you need to stay on high rpm to go to 30 km/h on a lower gear because the gear ratios are optimized thinking to a certain set of speeds (50, 70, 90 and 130 km/h which are the most common in EU), you will end with a higher consumption.

            • JensSpahnpasta@feddit.org
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              1 day ago

              That’s exactly what I wanted to say: 30 is one of the most common speeds in the EU. They are not new and have been around since the 70s/80s. Cities are pushing for 30 as a default speed. You have thousands and thousands of kilometres of residential streets with T30. If you do not optimize for that as a manufacturer, you shouldn’t build cars.

              • gian
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                1 day ago

                That’s exactly what I wanted to say: 30 is one of the most common speeds in the EU. They are not new and have been around since the 70s/80s.

                As far as I know, the city speed limit is 50 km/h for a very long time. In the 199x, when I got my driver license it was it, the push for the 30 km/h limit is a relatively new thing, maybe last 5 years. Not to say that before there where not some 30 km/h zones in cities, but the default in every urban center (small or big) is/was 50.

                Cities are pushing for 30 as a default speed.

                Now yes, but is a relatively recent thing, and only for big cities.

                You have thousands and thousands of kilometres of residential streets with T30. If you do not optimize for that as a manufacturer, you shouldn’t build cars.

                Italy currently has an estimated total 2700 km of 30 km/h residential streets. My city alone (Milan) has about 58.0000 km of streets (only residential streets, the total is way higher).
                Maybe manufacturer are not that dumb if they do not optimize the engine for the equivalent of the (less then) 5% of the streets of just one city in a state.

                And I suppose that other states are in a somewhat similar situation.

                • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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                  5 hours ago

                  Lower speed limits also yielded environmental benefits, with emissions decreasing on average by 18%, noise pollution levels by 2.5 dB, and fuel consumption by 7%, indicating enhanced fuel efficiency and reduced environmental impact.

                  Review of City-Wide 30 km/h Speed Limit Benefits in Europe

                  In this study they did not look into the reduction of particulate matter from tire and brake abrasion, which is a major source of pollution caused by cars, so the environmental benefit is even greater than they found.

                  • gian
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                    4 hours ago

                    I agree, but we are discussing why manufacturers are not idiot to not optimize engines for the speed limit of a very (for now, I agree) percentual of the streets.

      • einkorn@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        Well, fuel consumption depends on the way you shift gears as well. But yes, it general it’s less.

      • Kokesh@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Ok, I would have to drive in lower gear. That means using more power, higher RPM. Hence higher consumption.

        • ZkhqrD5o@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Um, no not really. The gearbox only exists because the engine can only go so fast. The tyres can spin way faster than the engine. For example, you could take your foot entirely off the throttle and still drive 70 in sixth gear while the engine essentially idles. On the other side of the spectrum, the slowest the car can go, while having full contact with the gearbox would be 8 kmh, give or take. So, in the middle of the spectrum you could drive about 30kmh with 3rd gear fully clutched in and the engine on idle. Slower is also possible, naturally. Most cities choose 30 kilometres an hour because that’s when road deaths sharply increase. The reason for this is complex, but one of the main reasons is the field of view. The faster a car goes, the smaller your field of vision becomes. You can clearly see the pavement on your side, the other side of the road, and even some of the pavement of the opposite side. When driving 50, however, you can basically only see your own pavement and some of the opposite road. When doing 130 you can essentially only see your own lane well, with rudimentary details in the other adjacent lanes.

          • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            The gearbox only exists because the engine can only go so fast.

            Oversimplified. The transmission exists because engines are optimally efficient at specific RPM ranges and the transmission works to keep the engine in those ranges. It/you (auto vs stick) will also downshift to provide more power at the cost of efficiency if hard acceleration is required.

            When doing 130 you can essentially only see your own lane well, with rudimentary details in the other adjacent lanes

            If you can’t see adjacent lanes, then you’re not scanning properly. This is called tunnel vision and where I live you’ll fail a road test for it. You’d also fail for going 130km/h.

    • MissingGhost@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      What if I tell you that noise pollution is a type of pollution? A lot of car noise is tyre noise which is proportional to speed. Also, tyre and brake particules are a type of pollution. They are created mostly from accelerating and braking.

    • JensSpahnpasta@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      Your error is thinking about “fuel”. It is the stated goal of the EU to push electronic cars and it totally doesn’t matter if some legacy technology is not working perfectly on safe roads.