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1.6: Comparing Genres, Example 4

  • Page ID
    5565
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    Introduction

    Once more, read through the excerpt below. What do you notice while reading, without knowing much about the source overall?


    “HYBRID VEHICLE”

    A hybrid vehicle uses two or more distinct types of power, such as internal combustion engine+electric motor,[1] e.g. in diesel-electric trains using diesel engines and electricity from overhead lines, and submarines that use diesels when surfaced and batteries when submerged. Other means to store energy include pressurized fluid, in hydraulic hybrids.

    Heavy vehicles

    Hybrid power trains use diesel-electric or turbo-electric to power railway locomotives, buses, heavy goods vehicles, mobile hydraulic machinery, and ships. A diesel/turbine engine drives an electric generator or hydraulic pump, which powers electric/hydraulic motor(s) – strictly an electric/hydraulic transmission (not a hybrid), unless it can accept power from outside. With large vehicles conversion losses decrease, and the advantages in distributing power through wires or pipes rather than mechanical elements become more prominent, especially when powering multiple drives — e.g. driven wheels or propellers. Until recently most heavy vehicles had little secondary energy storage, e.g. batteries/hydraulic accumulators — excepting non-nuclear submarines, one of the oldest production hybrids, running on diesels while surfaced and batteries when submerged. Both series and parallel setups were used in WW2 submarines.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Question for consideration:

    As you read through the passage above, what distinguishing features about the text stand out to you?

    Answer

    Features you noted might include:

    • two alternative suggestions for reading at the top
    • several hyperlink text phrases
    • use of footnotes
    • phrase “hybrid vehicle” in bold
    • formal tone
    • technical language
    • section header, “Heavy vehicles”
    • historical and present-day information

    1.6: Comparing Genres, Example 4 is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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