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Bridgestone Ecopia EP100
Hello -
Saw a commercial for this and was curious : Bridgestone Ecopia EP100 http://www.tirerack.com/images/tires...p100_ci1_l.jpg Quote:
CarloSW2 |
Thats the tire I'm running on my Prius. I did have some normal cheapo tires the previous owner put on (non LRR) last summer and averaged about 55 mpg until winter. So far, it appears I'll be getting 58-60 mpg this summer. So, I'm quite happy with them.
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Tirerack.com did a LRR tire roundup. The ecopia placed near the top. When Round and Black Becomes Lean and Green I'll probably buy the Ecopia's to replace my OEM Dunlop 31's.
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That's what I'm going to put in my 17s. They are still wearing hi grip federals and GTs and have around 4 mm on them. It could be a year or two before I do the mod.
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flyer351 -
Quote:
http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-cf...comparison.jpg There are 7 tires, ordered from highest to lowest MPG. Each tire gets points for it's rank. If it's ranked first, it gets 7 points. If it's ranked second, it gets 6 points. The higher the number, the better the performance. The tests are given equal weight. In the above, the Yokohama has the highest total number of points, but ranks 3rd in MPG. The Michelin Energy Saver, Ecopia, and Yokohama are the top-3 MPG tires. The Ecopia is definitely becoming more intriguing to me. CarloSW2 |
Interesting article, but I think one major problem with their results: the ScanGauge just isn't all that accurate in measuring fuel consumption, so their rankings could be way off.
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...oh, the SG is accurate enough, but I doubt the test driver(s) are 100% perfect in repeatability...and certainly the daily weather isn't.
...and, were the vehicles warmed up to the exact same amount before EACH and EVERY test...I doubt it. |
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But I agree about the driver/repeatability issues, and the other problems of trying to do a comparison of real-world driving in practical time. Much better to do rolling resistance in a lab, with sensitive equipment. |
Carlos, very cool graph! But I'm wondering how the prices compare between the tires. For me, cost is definitely a deciding factor.
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Tango Charlie -
Quote:
$84 = Bridgestone Ecopia EP100 (Grand Touring Summer 185/65R15 88H) $85 = Goodyear Assurance ComforTred (Passenger All-Season 185/65R15 86T) $76 = Goodyear Assurance Fuel Max (Passenger All-Season 185/65R15 86T) $69 = Goodyear Integrity (Passenger All-Season 185/65R15 86S) (*) $122 = Michelin Energy Saver A/S (Passenger All-Season 185/65R15 86T) $118 = Michelin HydroEdge with Green X (Passenger All-Season 185/65R15 86T) $105 = Yokohama dB Super E-Spec (Grand Touring Summer 185/65R15 88H) (*) - The Goodyear Integrity is the tire that was OEM on my Saturn S-Series and is the cheapest of the bunch. CarloSW2 |
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