Market distortion that favours diesels ? You should come and have a look then:
- higher road tax for a diesel, in some countries 200% more than a gasoline car of the same weight
- extra requirements such as factory installed particle filters on diesel exhausts
- extra tax penalties on diesel fuel
Europeans care about clean air very much, and most European cities I've been to compare favourably with the American cities of similar size that I've been to. (Detroit, Los Angeles, New York vs say Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam and Berlin).
In former eastblock countries the situation is worse though.
As for the rest of your arguments, you should test drive a BMW 5 series diesel and we'll talk about power, handling and more of those items you mentioned.
And let's not even get started on reliability, diesels are in a completely different ball park when it comes to that. Here a diesel car that has 200k on the clock counts as 'just broken in', the same chassis with a petrol engine would count as being at 60..70% of its economic lifespan.
Though the engine produces a stunning 425 lb-ft of torque at just 1750 rpm, the forward surge doesn't feel dramatic. [...] X5 owners shouldn't feel too cocky [...]
Press the pedal to overtake [...] and the engine note invades the cabin. [...]
We often hear tall tales of European diesels, stories of ridiculous fuel economy, supercar acceleration, and unmatched utility. [...] the truth isn't quite so dramatic
Comparing a 3.5 liter diesel with a 4.8 liter petrol car, that's like comparing apples and oranges.
Topgear on those same cars, better data: "
All the bigger BMW engines are wonderful and the X5 boasts three of the best. You can go for a ‘base' 3.0i petrol(268bhp, 0-62mph in 8.1 and 130mph), the diesel version of the 3.0litre (232bhp, but because of the extra torque 0-62mph in the same 8.1 and the same 130mph top end), or go for the range-topping 4.8-litre V8 with 350bhp, 150mph and 0-62 in 6.5."
So, exactly the same performance for two 3.0 liter engines by a quality manufacturer, one diesel, one petrol.
And yes, if you increase the displacement the petrol engine will get more power but that is no longer a fair comparision.
- higher road tax for a diesel, in some countries 200% more than a gasoline car of the same weight - extra requirements such as factory installed particle filters on diesel exhausts - extra tax penalties on diesel fuel
Europeans care about clean air very much, and most European cities I've been to compare favourably with the American cities of similar size that I've been to. (Detroit, Los Angeles, New York vs say Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam and Berlin).
In former eastblock countries the situation is worse though.
As for the rest of your arguments, you should test drive a BMW 5 series diesel and we'll talk about power, handling and more of those items you mentioned.
And let's not even get started on reliability, diesels are in a completely different ball park when it comes to that. Here a diesel car that has 200k on the clock counts as 'just broken in', the same chassis with a petrol engine would count as being at 60..70% of its economic lifespan.