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Broke the 50mpg barrier at the MPG Rally!
First the facts and numbers:
'07 Honda Civic EX, 91 miles, 1.711 gals. 53.19mpg! Now the long story: The odometer read 86 miles, but the official distance of the MPG Rally in Lacey, WA was 91 miles. Either way, even when figuring the distance at 86 miles, this equals 50.26mpg. My primary goal was to reach 47.1 mpg, which would be just under 5L/100km - a nice goal. 50mpg was what I was hoping for, but wasn't too sure if it was even possible with a mainly stock car. But one can try, right? :D Removed all non-essential items from the car: spare tire and associated tools, rubber trunk tray, rear headrests (three in this car), maps and window cleaning kit, CDs, center console doohickeys (audio adapters, hand sanitizer, pocket knife, etc). All in all it filled a wheelbarrow, but probably not more than 50 lbs in weight. Made sure tires were at max sidewall pressure: 44psi. Checked the upper grille block. Drove with wife, aka co-pilot, to breakfast place some distance away to warm up engine and fluids thoroughly. Filled up at gas station which traditionally has provided good fuel for me with 92 grade. Short of serious surgery on the car more could not be done. This was my first serious effort at pulse and glide. We were barely averaging 36 mph in a stretch that should average 50 mph. It was raining and we had to crack the windows to prevent fogging and A/C use. All in all mentally very draining, but the result speaks for itself. This trip will go in my gas log probably as the all-time high, because the effort to reach that over long distances would simply be overkill. But theoretically, with topping the tank off to the brim 700 miles would be possible. That is equivalent to driving from Olympia, WA to Sacramento, CA on one tank. |
Thats pretty good. I can get into the mid 50's, but my avg speed is down below 30mph.
20-40mph EOC gets me the best mileage that technique can get out of the car. |
So what do you get if you cruise control at, lets say, 55mph? (just wondering)
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Sweet! You gotta love Hondas! What kind of roads were you driving on? Back roads? I take it was not very busy if you were getting away with doing 36mph.
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We first headed south out of town, 35-40mph speed limit. Traffic was not overly busy. Then 50 mph limit for 70% of the route with a few towns thrown in where 30mph was max. Of those 70% about 30% were on narrower winding backroads. The last section was through town 25-30 mph.
We were holding up traffic so badly at one point that P&G became unsafe. Drivers following were too aggressive. I decided to stop for a few minutes and let the line of cars following - about 10 of them - pass. Not that there was a solid line between lanes, no... my wife says that passing on two-lane roads isn't taught in driver's ed - is that correct? It was mandatory in my course in Austria - where passing isn't necessarily a sign of impatience like in my area... Oh - have I let this response turn into a rant? :p |
Haha, congrats on the good mileage superchow! A few good aeromods will definitely see you breaking 40 on a regular basis.
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Very nice! I grew up in Federal Way. Traffic is so much heavier now than it used to be. Even in the outlying areas like Lacey.
I have no clue about what is taught in driver's ed. That was 30 years ago for me. Congrats on your performance! |
Do you happen to know what LOD you were throwing during your pulse? And you EOC in between pulses? What were your max/min speeds for the p&g? What gear did you use?
Sorry I have pretty much the same car (08 LX sedan MT) so I'm curious. I've always wanted to get a tank over 50.... |
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Because the accelerator pedal isn't directly linked to the throttle body, but rather is interpreted by the computer, having high loads at low engine speeds actually hurts the mileage. At low load and low revs the i-VTEC kicks in and switches to lean burn mode and opens up the throttle plate for reduced pumping losses - or so the Honda documents say I've found searching the interwebs. The engine is most economical between 1500 and 3500 rpms according to those sources. I found that the best trick when driving my car is to avoid varying the throttle pedal too much - when cruising keep the gas pedal in one position. Even if the revs climb the engine should stay in lean burn mode up until about 3500 rpm, or 80 mph, if there isn't too much cross- or headwind. This is speculation, and I unfortunately don't have the money to verify it with a ScanGauge. But so far the above information has yielded the best mileages. What do you do to stay over 40 mpg? My driving is plagued with lots of city driving... |
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