Thursday, December 29, 2011

Fat Americans Defeat Fuel Emission Standards

All the technical gains that auto makers have invested into increased mileage have been defeated by Americans' fat asses.
Americans, on average, have gained enough weight during the past 40 years to cancel out automakers' vehicle-lightweighting efforts such as using lighter components or removing spare tire, reflecting an additional challenge automakers face to meet progressively more strict fuel-economy and greenhouse-gas emissions standards. The information comes from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in a recent Automotive News report.


The average adult U.S. male weighs almost 195 pounds, up 28.4 pounds from what an average adult male weighed in 1960, while the average female adult weight has risen 24.5 pounds over the same time period, Automotive News said, citing the CDC. The weight gained by the average male is about the same as a typical tire found on a Ford Mustang and almost cancels out the 30 pounds Ford was able to cut from the 2012 Focus by using a new, six-speed Powershift automatic transmission instead of the old Focus gearbox.

The combined weight gained by the average American male and female can cut average fuel economy by as much as one percent, which could translate to an additional 153 million gallons of gas burned in the U.S. over the course of a year.
Expect Obama's psycho-fascist EPA to declare Americans' diets as within their authority to control.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Car Leasing said...

This is both annoying and funny at the same time, to think how much people weigh can have such an impact on the country as a whole.
Its the junk food peopl eat over there, too much of it. The portions at the junk food houses aree just massive.

4:12 AM  

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