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Short highway trips 20 mpg
city driving 14 mpg
average driving 17 mpg
1000 roundtrip mile trip from Southern CA. to South Lake Tahoe is 23 mpg, however A/C was not used due to winter weather.
Bottom line, highway EPA is easy to duplicate, but city driving a 4500 pound SUV, takes its toll
17 mpg is only possible on the most favorable average drive.
City driving 15 mpg.
Highway 20 mpg.
average driving 18 mpg
Original tires were 28 inch tall, ugraded to 30 inch tires, now my MPG is about 1 mpg less, I checked all the other factors like gear ratio , tire diameter etc. Bottom line bigger and wider tires do add extra drag and reduce mileage.
???
isnt Fast = Fun!
My Miata is a good example. The Pilot's quicker but it wouldn't be nearly as fun.
-juice
7500 miles with mid-grade and regular gas
90% city- in town driving- 17mpg with a heavy foot
10% hwy driving- 23mpg around 75-80mph
These numbers are not out of the computer but "old fashion" way of gallons in vs. miles driven. On a good note, the computer in the car is usually pretty close.
IT HAS 160K ON IT BUT I THINK THE MOTOR HAS BEEN REBUILT STOCK. COULD YOU EMAIL ME BACK AT steve.brandt@wesconproducts.com
thanks
Please keep the discussion here so everyone benefits. To do otherwise defeats the purpose of a message board which is to share information, views and experiences.
tidester, host
I live in a rural area so do not do any serious city driving but do about 25% of my mileage in a fairly congested medium size midwestern town with alot of stop lights.
My mileage does get a little worse in the winter, especially if the weather dictates leaving it in the AWD setting for an extended period.
This is a lot better than in the winter where I was getting about 18 city and barely 21 highway.
Car now has about 4,600 miles on it.
Gas Saving Gizmos & Gadgets
Steve, Host
Just saw your observation about your mileage jump when switching from regular to premium. Before you get all excited and switch to premium, let me relate this to you and other readers. In college we did an experiment with premium grade and regular grade unleaded gasoline to determine if there was any more energy in premium. The experiment used a calorimeter, a device to measure the calories contained in different materials. Calories are then converted to BTUs, or British Thermal Units for comparison. I can give you the long story, but the short story is, there is no energy difference in regular or premium or even mid-grade fuel.
The difference is in the mix of the additives in the gasoline which inhibit knocking and maybe some detergents. That's about it.
So a gallon of regular and a gallon of premium both contain the same amount of energy when burned resulting in the same gas mileage. Unless your car manufacturer requires you to run premium, or you have a knocking problem that is fuel related, don't bother trying to burn premium for the increased mileage: It just ain't in there.
I went to Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos where I received my Bachelor of Science in Technology. I also studied electronics for two years at Texas State Technical College in Waco.
That's for engines designed for premium octane, with modern knock sensors and ECUs capable of advancing the timing.
-juice
I get about 310-320 miles of the full tank before gas warning light came on (which corresponds to about 27-28m/gal - mostly on a highway).
Last week I went on business trip to upstate CT (from PA), spent there a week
driving each day about 10 miles to work and back to my hotel. On Friday I drove back home. I noticed that my odometer shows 354( !) miles,
then gas light came on and I stopped for refuel (in NJ). Clerk pumped me 11 gallons, and I had 359 on my trip odometer (he actually pumped more after auto shut off).
Anyway, conservative estimate: 359:11=32.6 miles/gallon . Wow!
Not bad for SUV !
What were your highway speeds?
But recently, I had opportunity to view the injection manifold of a Corvette Cross-fire fuel injection system. Guess what - vortex generators built right in by GM.
So the million dollar question. Is there any value in them? GM apparently felt so since they included it in their vehicle design.
Any ideas or comments
Paul P
-mike
It's funny, though, that some products claim to generate a vortex while others claim to calm down turbulence yet both are supposedly of benefit.
-juice
i think the vortex effect is built into engines in a different way these days.
it's also referred to as 'tumble', which mixes the air and fuel in a better way.
Paul P
it is interesting....
how it may be helpful and maybe a waste at the same time...
Will compile list of what was done to improve mileage and post tomorrow .
I have a 99 suburban 1500 with 4x4 ...and a whipple supercharger and all its associated stuff....
what can you suggest in terms of increasing gas mileage to 17 mpg...
I am getting about 16 mpg...
I don't think you could do any better, in fact I'm surprised you're not reporting 12mpg!
-juice