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New: $800 2001 Saturn SL1 - getting 40mpg
Hi,
I just sold my gas-guzzling SUV (18 mpg) and got an $800 2001 Saturn SL1 with 248k miles. (I wanted to buy a Toyota Echo, but couldn't find a decent one for $3000.) To my amazement, the little Saturn hooptie got 39.96 mpg on the first tank, with open windows and underinflated tires. Definitely a keeper. So now I brought it to the shop to get everything in shape. And then I will get that thing to 45 mpg, even if I have to push it. Andy |
Welcome to the site!
Yeah those little Saturns can really pump out the good mileage with that 1.9L engine. :) Congrats on the new car. |
45 shouldn't be much of a stretch. Congrats on the find. Long may it run!
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Soon you'll be trying to break the 50MPG barrier...
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Welcome to ecomodder, Andy.
Ditching the gas-guzzler is the most efficient change you can make :thumbup: Quote:
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I didn't know those cars had such a good MPG! Thanks!
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And aren't those Saturns non-metal on the outside? I'm not sure about Minnesota, but here in Wisconsin, every vehicle seems to have salt rust. Except those Saturns.
Great find! |
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Correct. The Saturn S-Series (SL1, SL2, SW1, SW2, SC1, SC2) has plastic panels on the sides. Only the hoods and roof are metal. They look great until the driver's seat breaks through the floor (metal).
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The single cam (your car) are great at getting 40 on a routine basis. Dual cams, like mine, are a little more thirsty. Even though they look good from the outside the front a rear subframe are prone to rust, as is the rear door sills. I pulled my trim piece off and found rust greater than the size of a dollar bill, might want to check yours. Plastic body panels are great but it gets cold up where you are and the plastic gets brittle, when they are impacted they crack and more likely, shatter.
Arcosine has a SC1 and gets 50mpg with his car. He's done a lot of aero and I think uses some EOC as well. Not sure if his boat tail is currently on or off... Is yours a manual or auto trans? saturnfans.com is a great source for keeping that heap running. First thing you should do is make sure the ECTS is the new design, brass, unit. It should be, as the plastic ones usually break around 150K miles. Just keep reading over there, whole bunch of info to be absorbed. DIYguy has a few threads on upping the eco by swapping sensors and fooling others. First investment should be a scangauge or ultragauge...I'm starting to become jealous of you OBD2 people lol. |
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