EcoModder.com

EcoModder.com (https://ecomodder.com/forum/)
-   Fossil Fuel Free (https://ecomodder.com/forum/fossil-fuel-free.html)
-   -   Whats your MPGT (Miles Per Gallon Ton) (https://ecomodder.com/forum/showthread.php/whats-your-mpgt-miles-per-gallon-ton-34954.html)

gumby79 03-12-2017 10:30 PM

Whats your MPGT (Miles Per Gallon Ton)
 
CSX was running a comercial a while back advertising 400MPGT
1ton of frate 400miles per gal
MPGT levels the playing field
Eg
My 91Ram D250 2wd 3/4ton weighting 5500lbs has been averaging 24mpg ×2.75t =66MPGT
A 2017 Prius empty is 3080lbs and epa 53 mpg =81.62mpgt
Formula
Weight (in tons )x mpg =MPGT

Stubby79 03-13-2017 04:21 AM

I'd think it would be more accurate to calculate it by the weight of cargo - mainly passengers for most of us - being carried, not by using the weight of the vehicle involved. There's nothing gained by moving around several thousand pounds of vehicle. There is something gained by moving around cargo/people.

It wouldn't necessarily reflect poorly on large/heavy vehicles, if you always have passengers. A 400lb mini-van that regularly has 4 passengers will out-do a 1600lb Geo metro with only 1 person in it. Or if you own a truck and are constantly hauling stuff around to your work site, you'd out-perform someone who doesn't move anything but their own self.

I'm of the opinion that a vehicle should be chosen by the purpose it will be put to.

And I doubt CSX is calculating the weight of the vehicle of transportation as part of it. Your own wording says "1 ton of freight 400miles per gal"...not 1 ton of freight & trucks/trains/etc.

gumby79 03-13-2017 06:37 AM

When I worked for Union Pacific we calculated total towed weight cars and Freight 6800tons 198mi on 500ga for each of 5 4400hp locomotives over Cascade summit .
2500÷198=12.62gal/mi÷6800=538.82 mpgt counting the 1010tons of power=618.86mpgt going up one of the worst grades on the systom
I had to run the numbers my self when I saw the commercial as i thought they were selling ocean beach condos in Denver, Colorado.

jakobnev 03-13-2017 10:33 AM

The Batilus: 2572 MPGT.

(Metric tons, actual cargo, US gallons, and land miles)


It's no good for single occupant commuting tho, since it only gets 0.0046 MPG.

ThermionicScott 03-13-2017 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gumby79 (Post 535961)
CSX was running a comercial a while back advertising 400MPGT
1ton of frate 400miles per gal
MPGT levels the playing field
Eg
My 91Ram D250 2wd 3/4ton weighting 5500lbs has been averaging 24mpg ×2.75t =66MPGT
A 2017 Prius empty is 3080lbs and epa 53 mpg =81.62mpgt
Formula
Weight (in tons )x mpg =MPGT

"Levels the playing field" is one way to put it.

"Obscures needless vehicle weight to make the manufacturer look better" would be another.

Fat Charlie 03-13-2017 12:58 PM

You don't count the vehicle weight unless you're delivering the vehicle to someone and leaving it there.

I'll round myself up to 200 lbs, or 0.1 tons. With boots, coat, coffee mug and pockets full of stuff it's probably not rounding up much. My annual mileage is consistent enough that I'll call it even. Logged annual mpgs are 42.9, 45.5 and 44.4, averaging 44.2666... mpg. I'll round that down to 44.25.

So commuting solo at 44.25 mpg, I'm shipping freight at 4.425 mpg per ton. Not as impressive as a train, or even the 5.3 mpgt I'd get in a Prius (if I got EPA), but it beats the pants off the 2.93 mpgt I was able to get in my Subaru.

MobilOne 03-13-2017 02:37 PM

Some years back, I read an article in an auto mag about a local auto club mpg economy contest in California. LA, I think. Anyway, they used the total weight: auto, passengers, cargo, etc. in their calcs. It wasn't about the rational use of a vehicle, just to see who could move the most weight for a given amount of gas. The guy who won had an old VW 4 dr sedan loaded up with junk and kids.

Stubby79 03-14-2017 01:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ThermionicScott (Post 535998)
"Levels the playing field" is one way to put it.

"Obscures needless vehicle weight to make the manufacturer look better" would be another.

That's what I was hinting at. ;)

ThermionicScott 03-14-2017 01:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stubby79 (Post 536083)
That's what I was hinting at. ;)

For sure! I think most of us agree that it's a good thing we don't use TMPG or MPGT anymore. :thumbup:

Daschicken 03-15-2017 12:25 AM

My car + me (assuming full tank of fuel perpetually)= 1.76 tons
My lifetime MPG=32.8 = 57.7 MPGT
My best trip MPG=48.0 = 84.5 MPGT
My best tank MPG=38.1 = 67.1 MPGT

cibbie with me wearing full gear= .255 tons

Lifetime MPG=51.7 = 13.2 MPGT :eek:
Best tank MPG=58.9 = 15.0 MPGT :eek:

Guess I better drive the car then...:p But I like riding the bike...:(

Cargo based MPGT makes more sense, and in the case of the bike, it would make it make A LOT more sense.

aerostealth 04-20-2017 11:28 AM

You can make it simpler then all that. Just calculate passenger mpg, if one (the driver) then the mpg is the mpg per passenger. If two or more just multiply times the passengers. Example a 25 mpg vehicle with thee passengers is getting 75 mpg per passenger.

gone9 12-07-2017 01:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gumby79 (Post 535961)
CSX was running a comercial a while back advertising 400MPGT
1ton of frate 400miles per gal
MPGT levels the playing field
Eg
My 91Ram D250 2wd 3/4ton weighting 5500lbs has been averaging 24mpg ×2.75t =66MPGT
A 2017 Prius empty is 3080lbs and epa 53 mpg =81.62mpgt
Formula
Weight (in tons )x mpg =MPGT



Definetely something I never considered.

weight=7640+me+gear =7945ish lb*17.7mpg=3.973T=70.6mpgt

Hoping with approaching mods to be around 20-21mpg soon though. for a 1999 f250 4x4 that's not bad in my book.

jcp123 12-07-2017 07:57 PM

Hmm... my Civic is about 56 ton mpg, with myself, fuel, and usually loaded with groceries and clothes for my four week over-the-road trucking stints, or minus the groceries as I head home.

2290lb curb weight + me + supplies is around 2550lb or 1.275 tons.
44.0mpg x 1.275 = 56.

My Freightliner, loaded to the gills on the flatlands with little wind would be just shy of 300 ton mpg (~39.5 tons x 7.5mpg), or about 220 if I'm fighting through the mountains (39.5 tons x ~5.5mpg). No cargo in the trailer, I'll see about ~160 tmpg (16.5 tons x 9.5mpg). Bobtailing drops me to around 110tmpg (9.5 tons x 11ish mpg)

slowmover 12-08-2017 07:41 AM

3.97T pickup solo at 19-mpg city = 74

Solo, on highway at 24-mpg = 95

With 3.95T 35’ travel trailer at 15-mpg = 123

The KW + smoothbore tanker at 39.7T = 225


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:02 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.5.2
All content copyright EcoModder.com