Hybrid cars are products of the world’s need for fuel economy. They were invented as to meet the problems confronting modern society, like oil price hikes and environmental hazards that are undeniably causing harm to both humans and other living creatures.
As a vehicle run by a combination of electricity and gas, a hybrid car can help preserve fuel and money and decrease air pollution.
Here is how it operates. In a hybrid car, it is not only the gas powerplant that is connected to the transmission, the part that passes the power on to the wheels and pushes the car forward, but also an electric motor. Both the gas powerplant and the traction motor can power the vehicle. The former runs the car and the latter is used when needed to increase power. This combination is called parallel.
The other configuration is the series hybrid, where a gas powerplant powers the generator. The generator then charges the batteries and powers the electric motor. The gasoline engine doesn’t power the car on its own. The electric motor operates when the car moves below a certain speed and the gasoline engine functions only when that speed is exceeded.
In addition, the engine of a hybrid is smaller than that of the common car, so the car is lighter and more efficient to manage and, hence, less fuel-consuming. And not only that, when a hybrid car is moving, it recharges the battery. When it is running slow, or not moving at all, or when it brakes, it also recharges itself. Logically, the more electricity the car uses, the less fuel it uses. This is why hybrid cars don’t use as much gas as conventional cars. This can help you reduce the number of trips to the gas station, saving time, money, energy, and guilt about being an earth pollutant.