It's a good point but I think it is. If only because, when people say they "prefer diesel", in many cases what they actually mean, is that they "prefer a turbo engine".
Now that many new cars come with the option of small capacity turbo petrols aimed at efficiency, it will be interesting to see if people still prefer the diesel when there's a suitably torquey and efficient petrol equivalent.
What tends to happen is instead of people trying to compare "like for like" diesel to petrol engines (which is tricky anyway) it becomes a game of engine top-trumps, whatever engine you start with we quickly end up bickering about M3's and V10Tdi's.
The truth of it is, in the main we are all spoilt rotten with modern engines regardless whether they are diesel or petrol. They need tiny amounts of maintenance compared with engines from a few decades back. I can remember a time when having the head off and doing a decoke was the norm; not to mention lying on my back hunting for grease nipples. I can even remember my dad starting the car off a cranking handle. I have a wry smile at the notion of rough diesels, the petrols of not so long ago were not that much better.
I tend to buy my cars new and keep them a long time. So when I swapped from the 1.9tdi I spent ages looking for something that was (on paper) as close as I could performance wise.
Outgoing Tdi. 100bhp, 0-60 10.5, 119mph, 240nm (1800-4000)
Incoming Tsi. 105bhp, 0-60 9.6, 118mph, 175nm (1400-5000)
On the road the 1.9Tdi had more pull than the petrol, but in was limited by the narrow power band. Now the petrol though down on sheer pull is much more driveable because of it's wider power band and the way it spins up quicker. Plus it has a 6 speed box which helps stay within the power band. It's is quieter but as soon as you get going in most cars it's wind and road noise that are the biggest factors anyway.
I've enjoyed petrol and diesel, I don't see why people become so polarised against one or the other. I think for the future small super efficient petrol engines rather than diesels will be the way things go.
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