Are they in bunkers? A friend who visited Italy a few years back told of waiting for the car to be filled up. The car was driven into a bunker under ground and everyone stayed well away while it was filled. I believe he also said it had no usable trunk as the whole thing was filled with the gas cylinders. I don't know for certain that was CNG but it must have been that or something similar. He also said it was much cheaper than gasoline in Italy.

Randy

On 25/01/2012 12:39 PM, Curt Raymond wrote:
I hear the "network of CNG stations" argument and it doesn't make much sense to 
me. Why can't a CNG pump (or pump equivalent) be added to the existing network of 
stations, or some of the existing network of stations? I've seen this at a few stations 
in greater LA already...

-Curt

Date: Wed, 25 Jan 2012 09:33:55 -0500
From: Rich Thomas<richthomas79td...@constructivity.net>
To: Mercedes Discussion List<mercedes@okiebenz.com>
Subject: Re: [MBZ] And here we were complaining about fuel prices ...
Message-ID:<4f2012d3.5010...@constructivity.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

No real need to get goosed by the gummint (we are all getting "goosed"
enough) -- if it makes economic sense (without artificial "sense") it
will be done.  The problem is the network of CNG stations, that would
have to be built out.  But it probably would make best sense for fleet
vehicles that could be refueled from a central location.

--R





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