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Plantwiz wrote: 1. Start driving better and quit excellerating and breaking as hard/fast as possible. 2. Drive the speed limit....it is a 'limit' not the minimum 3. Maintain ones vehicle 4. Be efficient in trips out 5. Use public transportation (that is already moving with mostly empty buses (in our area)). 6. Walk or Bike 7. Request the highway limits get lowered back to 55MPH or 60MPH from 70. There isn't a need for 70MPH and it just encourages people to drive 80-85MPH 8. And for a real nice way to drop the price.....quit demanding it. If alternative methods of transportation are used...they'll have a surplus on hand they'll want to sell cheap. Not $.79 a/gallon cheap (those days are gone), but maybe under $2 again....and when the price drops...don't buy it. We don't need it....we've just gotten awful used to having it and having as much of it as we wanted.
Vogon Poet wrote: $3.24 in upstate NY. Oddly enough, even though gas prices are so high, use of public transportation and carpooling is at an all time low when measured over the last 20 years. .....
NinjaBoy wrote: In the UK, we pay per Liter. So for every 1 U.S. liquid gallon there is 3.78 liters.Price per liter: Petrol: 98p Diesel: £1.09 So how would you guys feel about paying that much for fuel? It costs me about £60 ($126.50) to fill my car up, as I have a 2.0 TDCi Ford Mondeo. -Ken*Prices and conversion rates are correct as of today 09/Nov/2007
Lee H wrote: Hi I only have a 1.3 Ford fiesta and i fill up £35 every week. 99.9p per litre is what i paid yesterday, its getting out of hand. If i lived near to my work i would use a bike, remember that yellow pages advert "I was right about that saddle though" Lee H
Plantwiz wrote: $3.19 today some a little higher some still hanging on at $3.09 for a couple more hours. The US doesn't even pay a comparable rate to what Europe pays, there is really nothing to complain about. 1. Start driving better and quit excellerating and breaking as hard/fast as possible. 2. Drive the speed limit....it is a 'limit' not the minimum 3. Maintain ones vehicle 4. Be efficient in trips out 5. Use public transportation (that is already moving with mostly empty buses (in our area)). 6. Walk or Bike 7. Request the highway limits get lowered back to 55MPH or 60MPH from 70. There isn't a need for 70MPH and it just encourages people to drive 80-85MPH 8. And for a real nice way to drop the price.....quit demanding it. If alternative methods of transportation are used...they'll have a surplus on hand they'll want to sell cheap. Not $.79 a/gallon cheap (those days are gone), but maybe under $2 again....and when the price drops...don't buy it. We don't need it....we've just gotten awful used to having it and having as much of it as we wanted.
snadam wrote: 6 years ago I was paying $.99\gallon.
sprkymrk wrote: snadam wrote: 6 years ago I was paying $.99\gallon. Are you SURE about that? I remember paying 89 cents a gallon - in 1985. That's more like 20+ years ago. Six years ago was close to 2 bucks a gallon, if I remember correctly, in the midwest.
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