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10 to 12 mpg improvement is the same as 30 to 60 mpg
So I got my spreadsheet out and low and behold it works out that Vehicle A going from 10 mpg to 12 mpg at X miles/year will give the same reduction in number of gallons/year as Vehicle B going from 30 mpg to 60 mpg, when both vehicles travel the same number of miles. This seemingly paradoxical calculation is probably well known on this forum but I think Joe Public and Joe Politician or even Consumer Reports do not seem to know this. When you hear Consumer Reports saying A/C use give about a 1 mpg reduction.
Or when going from 10 mpg to 12 mpg is reported as 20% improvement is reported as being equivalent to another vehicle going from 30 mpg to 36 mpg as also a 20% improvement and mistakenly concluding that, as both were 20% improvements in mpg, that they have equal fuel consumption reduction impact. That's right motoring press even % improvements in mpg are not comparable. I wonder if the 2 or 3 mpg differences once you get into the high 40s, low 50s are sometimes given too much emphasis. |
..."ratios" will do that to/for you.
...ain't playing with numbers a lot of FUN? 1.2 = 12/10 ...but: 2.0 = 60/30 |
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Agreed, the only difference is (for an average vehicle) it's much easier to go from 10mpg to 12mpg than 30 to 60 mpg. |
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Yes, the MPG Illusion.
Duke Professors Jack Soll and Richard Larrick discovered this a while back - that mpg works in terms of diminishing returns such that gains made on fuel thirstier vehicles save more fuel. In truth, and they articulated this in the video, mpg is a poor measurement of FE, for the simple fact that it isn't linear. |
Exponential function anyone? I understand that the majority of people on this board who are above 35mpg are doing it for fun, but above that rate there's not a lot of money to be saved for the amount of effort involved. I was getting about 25mpg average last summer, id be ecstatic to hit 30mpg combined this summer, but above that i wouldn't save much money.
at my 300miles a week, id save about $30 a month going up to 30mpg. but going from 30 to 35mpg id only save an extra $20. if you made an astronomical leap from 50mpg to 80mpg average, you'd save just barely over $30 a month. |
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Let's start with the "no". There's NOT 1.67 gallon saved per 100 miles, either way? How much IS saved in each 100 miles driven, in each situation? I agree that I don't see your point, though. Help me. |
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