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Strategies & Market Trends : Ask Vendit Off-Topic Questions -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MJ who wrote (8059)4/21/2005 8:09:39 PM
From: MJ  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8752
 
PART I BY MJ

The Hybrid Power for engines has caught my minds eye. I am as fascinated by this new technology as I was by the 1968 Flight to the Moon. No doubt, it goes back to standing for what seemed like hours holding a screwdriver for my belated father as he tweaked the various pumps and connections of his Ford that had a running board to stand on and watch ----those were the days of bailing wire and patches and bubble gum to hold things together.

Recently, there have been discussions about hybrid power and the future of automobiles as it relates to reducing our need on oil on this board. Those who remember the 1970’s gasoline lines will remember that a car that got 20 miles per gallon was cherished. The innovation in this area was being done then by Saab, Peugeot, Fiat, Toyo Koyo, Mazda, and Toyota with America lagging in the process. At that time our family’s green Saab got 30 plus miles but gallon; however, it often sounded like a pop corn popper.

The Hybrid systems of now and the future in automobiles, trains, ships are replacing the mechanical systems of the past. In simple words, the automobiles that we know and have known are being controlled by electronics with the goal of making them more efficient in the utilization of fuel and decreasing pollution. As Huber and Mills point out, the combustion engine will last, but will be surrounded by semiconductors, motors and batteies that make things smaller, faster, cleaner and more efficient.

(See next message for list of stocks). Provided for information only not my recommendations.



To: MJ who wrote (8059)4/21/2005 8:17:29 PM
From: Walkingshadow  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 8752
 
Another one with great products/technology is CPST.

Fallen on hard times, as with most of the sector, but a great story there.

Some of the buses here run on CPST turbines. You can burn almost anything in them, and yet their emissions are so clean you can run them indoors and in small enclosed areas no problem.

Huber and Mills used to write about CPST, but I don't follow them anymore.

T