Was at a certain location in Los Angeles on Monday the 13th where a Lexus-sponsored dinner and new model unveiling was going on. The new 450h sedan was being introduced, basically a Lexus "Hybrid" LS 400 Sedan that, instead of using an 8, uses a 6 and electric motor and gets the mileage of a compact sedan. All fine.
Here's the thing, though: One of the dealers goes over and pops the hood on one of the 450h so people can walk past and check out the big selling point, the hybrid engine. I'm looking at the engine, with the hood up, and I see two thick orange apparently electric cables at the top left corner piercing a metal/plastic cover that spans the entire length and width of the engine bay. All you can see of the engine is, what looks like, the intake runners through an exposed engine section in the middle of the cover. Talk about an "Iron Curtain."
You don't see a lot of people doing their own maintenance/repair on high-end sedans. But, you especially won't with Japanese Hybrids like Lexus. Furthermore, you won't see your local Amoco service station doing the work either. Lexus/Toyota and Honda basically have a monopoly on maintenance/repair for their hybrid vehicles (pretty sure their warranty mandates the same). Ford is probably the same with their Escape Hybrid.
Also, Hybrids have been available and on the up and up in the US since 1999. Japanese companies own most of the patents relating to the technology and US/Europe is having to pay a fair amount of licensing fees per vehicle. Buy a Ford Excape Hybrid and you are indirectly paying Toyota (whether you know it or not). Porsche is going to introduce hybrids and licensing fees are going to get kicked back to Toyota and/or Honda for use of their technology.
Needless to say, what does this all look like:
1. Toyota and Honda dealers and the manufacturers have the wind at their back for at least the next 20 years; going to be an especially great time to be a Toyota/Honda/Lexus dealer. Dealers own you for hybrid service & new hybrid markup is "hy"
. These manufacturers, Toyota/Honda, also own the other manufacturers (domestic, european, asian) with regards to intellectual property, the tech "patents." And the enviro public and even the state govs are helping things in that direction (green emphasis, reduce foreign oil, Hybrid HOV lanes). So get yourself a Lexus, Toyota or Honda dealership in Scottsdale and buy and hold on Toyota stock :roll:
2. DIY on a hybrid? Not for a while. (course it was the same with the intro of Emissions controls and ECUs in the 70s and 80s domestically; saw first aftermarket "chip" for a computer-controlled car in 1986)
3. Probably 10 years before you'll find any good nitty-gritty how-tos for hybrid cars, mods, etc.
4. Hopefully Jeep will go Diesel or lightweight/composite/aero rather than pay licensing fees for hybrid tech. Would be ironic if, when you buy a Jeep (U.S.), you end up paying licensing fees to Toyota (Japan) through DC (German) :roll: Both my WW2-era Grandfathers are rolling in graves.