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-   -   Hi from Kansas! 94 Accord (https://ecomodder.com/forum/showthread.php/hi-kansas-94-accord-33008.html)

WaffleMan 10-29-2015 05:07 PM

Hi from Kansas! 94 Accord
 
Hey guys, been lurking for a week or two. Had a 05 f150 that got 13mpg, cost me $230 in payments, $130 in insurance, and $200+ in gas every month. So at least $560/month just for the truck. Between that and my mustang it was just getting too expensive. Sold the truck, bought my neighbors 1994 accord lx for $1k with 139k miles, it had been sitting, all it needed was a battery and I've been driving it two weeks now. No more payments, $30 insurance, and so far mpg is looking great. Didn't start driving nicely and using hypermile techniques until I had 1/2 a tank left and I still got 28mpg. MPGuino is ordered, figure I can get this thing into the high 30s easily. I also have a 2004 mustang cobra, I won't be hypermiling it though, in fact I'll probably be doing the exact opposite, it's supercharged and runs on e85, makes 700whp which is about 800hp at the motor, keeps me sane while hypermiling this honda yet it's probably more "green" than most the vehicles on here since it runs on e85.

I'm 24 yrs old, assistant manager at QuikTrip in Wichita, KS. Going back to finish my mechanical engineering degree in January, only have 1.5 yrs left

MetroMPG 10-29-2015 09:02 PM

Welcome, WaffleMan!

Congrats on reining in your vehicle costs. We've had a few members with Accords of that vintage who have done some really good mods. Have you seen those? Any plans for yours?

MPGuino is a great first step. "Keeping score" on a daily basis can make the commute an engaging challenge.

2000mc 10-29-2015 09:26 PM

Hey Kansan, Lawrence over here

If nothing else, switching from the truck to the Honda can get you $400 more for mustang mods a month. Downside I've found, is that the faster it goes, the less often I drive it.

kafer65 10-29-2015 09:35 PM

I used to have an '94 myself. Great car! Is yours a manual or automatic? I'd get 31 mpg mostly and once I got 38 but I didn't drive it for economy in my youth. I loved to rev it out. It didn't have very much grunt with the air conditioning on so I can tell you from personal experience, and other here as well, that the stock intake snorkle is the best way to retain the maximum low end torque. Welcome!

WaffleMan 10-30-2015 09:23 AM

MetroMPG: No mods planned really, already have the tires up to 38psi from factory 32psi. Will prob take them a little farther. Might do a grill block too but that's probably it unless you know of some simple ones for this specific car.

2000mc: that's definitely true, I used to daily drive the mustang and now that it has so much money and modifications sunk into it I'm lucky to drive it once a week now.

Kafer65: it's an auto, pretty confident I can get it past 31 mpg, at least I hope I can. I don't plan on messing with anything on the car at all really, just leaving it all factory unless there is something to be done that is cheap and has a good impact on its mpg

WaffleMan 10-30-2015 09:30 AM

It's weird looking around on this forum, I'm used to being on svtperformance.com and everything on here is basically opposite from the mustang forums. You guys talking about warm air intakes and running low rolling resistance tires at crazy high psi. While I'm trying to get the coldest air possible into the mustang, I run drag radials at 22-23psi. It's just so strange and a completely different world over here.

elhigh 10-30-2015 12:27 PM

Join us. Don't be afraid.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by WaffleMan (Post 498043)
It's just so strange and a completely different world over here.

Yes it is, but it is still high performance.

In the traditional hi-po world, you're trying to wring the most power out of the vehicle, usually to cover the most distance in the least amount of time. In ecomodding you're trying to wring the most energy - a somewhat different but related measurement - out of the fuel to cover the greatest distance on the least amount of fuel.

The equations are similar but you're trying to drive different graphs in different directions.

Care to share a time slip from your Mustang? You don't squeeze that kind of muscle out of an engine without staging at the lights at least once in a while. I mean, what would be the point?

It would be interesting to see what kind of mileage you could draw out of the Mustang. Especially on E85 - which I don't consider all that green, all things considered - which doesn't get a lot of coverage here. I know you take a big mileage hit on E85; if you could bring it back to something decent, that would be something to explore.

MetroMPG 10-30-2015 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by elhigh (Post 498049)
Yes it is, but it is still high performance.

Well said.

There's a lot of cross-over between the two worlds. The mindset (squeezing max. performance) is similar, as is the desire to tinker on what would otherwise be a stock commuting appliance.

Not to mention honing driving skills for best results.

2000mc 10-30-2015 07:27 PM

It's performance and takes attentive driving to do well, kind of like driving fast or a fast car. You can actually do it all the time though, with anything fast enough, you can only open it up for a couple seconds before you're at extremely illegal speeds. You could hypermile as hard as you can all the time, and rarely ever get in any trouble for it

Baltothewolf 10-30-2015 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 2000mc (Post 498014)
Hey Kansan, Lawrence over here

If nothing else, switching from the truck to the Honda can get you $400 more for mustang mods a month. Downside I've found, is that the faster it goes, the less often I drive it.

Sadly, the faster it goes the more often it's in the shop or the garage due to needing more care haha.


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