First, let me make clear I'm not bashing Harleys or the Ford F-150 series here. Harleys get fantastic gas mileage. Ford's base F-150 XL model is an excellent made-in-America truck that gets 17 miles per gallon city and 23 mpg highway, not far from some of the best-mileage pickups like the Chevrolet Silverado Hybrid's 20 city/23 highway.
But the two brands have combined into a gas-guzzling, hideously expensive Frankenstein monster. The Harley-Davidson edition starts at a ridiculous $48,720 and gets a putrid 13 miles per gallon city and 18 mpg highway. So not only does the Harley model get 25 percent worse gas mileage than the base XL model, but you could buy two F-150 XLs for the price of one F-150 Harley - with $4,000 leftover for gas money.
And that's before we talk about what it looks like. I'll leave that to Car & Driver:
If the décor is in fact your style, though, your taste might be a little, shall we say, questionable. Example: There is glitter on the center console. To paraphrase everybody’s favorite park-bench prophet, that’s all we have to say about that.Not just expensive and planet-killing, but ugly too ... but hey, I'm sure people will think you're just as cool as actual Harley riders.
That little Saturn is among the most mighty of GM's MPG-centric offerings over the years. Long may she run - on low rolling resistance tires.
ReplyDeleteThe Benjamin Franklin quote, "eat to please thyself, but dress to please others," shouldn't apply to modes of personal transportation.
Think of the Harley F-150 not as a gas hog, but as a subsidizer of your highway travel. For every pothole you pay to fix through gasoline taxes, the pickup truck fixes two or three.
The Silverado Hybrid has not met much sales success. The F-150 EcoBoost, however, is doing quite well ...
Batteries and emblems are not a panacea.