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-   -   69.36 MPGus @ 65mph without P&G (https://ecomodder.com/forum/showthread.php/69-36-mpgus-65mph-without-p-g-8985.html)

Eddles 06-29-2009 01:30 PM

69.36 MPGus @ 65mph without P&G
 
Well pleased to get 864.2 miles which is 69.36 MPGus (3.4 l/100km, 83.3 MPGuk) out of my last tank. I think this is pretty good considering I drive at 65mph average, I don't do P&G, and this includes 5% city driving and 3 hours stuck in stop-go traffic. :):):)

One day once I get cruise control installed, I will try commuting at 55mph, see what MPG I get.

Unfortunately, in the UK it's very difficult to P&G on our busy motorways and I don't really fancy the effort of P&G, but it'd be awesome to find out what MPG I can get out of my old car if I did P&G.

Shame my usual commute don't get this mileage, I think it's because my car takes at least 10 minutes to warm up to normal temperature and there's *lots* of traffic lights on the first 2 miles of the commute (something like 20) designed to waste fuel.

cfg83 06-29-2009 03:37 PM

Eddles -

Great Job!

CarloSW2

doviatt 06-29-2009 06:34 PM

Nice job! Nice bump in your fuel chart. Keep it up there!

tasdrouille 06-29-2009 08:34 PM

That's an awesome number for straight 65 mph highway driving. That's what a small diesel engine will get you, that we can't get over here.

Sometimes I dream about importing complete 1.6 turbo diesel drivetrain from europe to swap into my elantra, but that's no small task. If I could find a cheap half cut a couple years away I'd be really happy.

RobertSmalls 06-29-2009 10:25 PM

Very impressive.

I find that traffic can actually improve my fuel economy on the highway, by reducing my top speed. As long as you don't have to hit the brakes, you're golden. If you can get away with dropping it into neutral when there's slowness ahead, then you're P&G in traffic.

I plan to look into a block heater to reduce warm-up time and improve short-trip MPG.

SVOboy 06-29-2009 10:43 PM

I am so jealous :)

Eddles 06-30-2009 01:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cfg83 (Post 112853)
Eddles -

Great Job!

CarloSW2

Thanks ;)

Quote:

Originally Posted by doviatt (Post 112853)
Nice job! Nice bump in your fuel chart. Keep it up there!

Thanks. Unfortunately, it won't stay that high. That tank wasn't from my usual commute - it was from driving between cities to visit friends - one leg was 220 miles of non-stop driving.

Quote:

Originally Posted by tasdrouille (Post 112853)
That's an awesome number for straight 65 mph highway driving. That's what a small diesel engine will get you, that we can't get over here.

"Small" ? 1.7 is considered large here! The Vauxhall Corsa-D has a 1.3 litre turbodiesel option which sometimes I wish the Astra could have, however my 1.7 is pretty weedy at only 75bhp, so the 1.3 probably wouldn't work at all in my car especially with the gear ratios the car has! The Vauxhall Nova/Corsa-A (car I used to own, very light at 750kg) had a 1.5 litre non-turbo diesel option which I now wish I had the chance to try out.

Quote:

Originally Posted by cfg83 (Post 112853)
I find that traffic can actually improve my fuel economy on the highway, by reducing my top speed. As long as you don't have to hit the brakes, you're golden. If you can get away with dropping it into neutral when there's slowness ahead, then you're P&G in traffic.

I plan to look into a block heater to reduce warm-up time and improve short-trip MPG.

Good point - that makes sense, however acceleration from stop uses up the most fuel, doesn't it? It's rather annoying that people keep cutting in when I make large gaps though.

I really need to find the time to check the thermostat, as 10 minutes for the engine to warm up to 85 degrees C (normal temperature) sounds like an unnaturally long time. However, if I use the fan heater on max on motorways where the ambient temperature is 10 degrees C, the engine actually cools down to 70 degrees C, so the engine probably isn't making that much heat to keep all that cast iron warm.

I know an engine block heater is a good idea especially if the thermostat is working fine, but I think I won't have the necessary patience/foresight to actually use it, and I probably won't make the savings from the cost of the block heater/electricity costs - Electricity is expensive in the UK. Also, unfortunately the rated MPG for my car is really poor (only 39MPGus for urban cycles as opposed to 66.7MPGus for extra urban cycles) so the benefit might be minimal, so I try to do little city driving as possible. Luckily there's a tram stop 1 min walk from my house and I have a free pass, so that's a big help.

tasdrouille 06-30-2009 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eddles (Post 113014)
"Small" ? 1.7 is considered large here!

Yup, it's all a matter of perspective. The smallest we can now get here is 2.0.

Eddles 06-30-2009 03:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tasdrouille (Post 113022)
Yup, it's all a matter of perspective. The smallest we can now get here is 2.0.

Blimmin' heck. Is that just for diesels, or for petrols as well?

I mean, common engine sizes for Transit sized vans (seemingly about 50% of vehicles on road) are 2.0 and 2.5 litres - I work for a well known UK postal company, and we tend to use Transit SWB vans[1] with 2.0 litre naturally aspirated diesel engines or Combo vans with 1.7 litre naturally aspirated diesel engines.

[1] Mainly battered - maybe postmen want to test out the golf dimple theory?

robchalmers 06-30-2009 04:18 PM

Well Done Mate, my last car was a astra 1.7dti estate and I got a peak 71mpguk from rosehill tesco in carlisle(j43) coming down to Haydock roundabout (J23) roundabout on the m6 (write off by van driver.... grumble) and that had no mods and cruising at 65-70. Good to see you're keep the British end up ( :) )


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