thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne
The key is changing your driving habits. When we went to Phoenix for Memorial Day Weekend, we did the Las Cruces -> Phoenix leg at around 65 MPG and got 36-36 MPG over 400 miles and still got there in about 7 hours. I've occasionally coasted down from Cloudcroft to Alamogordo with the car in neutral but the engine still on, but not enough to notice a change in MPG. If I ever get to move back there, it would be an interesting experiment to run over a couple of tanks. It wouldn't work as well going to or from the observatory.

One example in the first article: "Fulton routinely gets 55 mpg from his 1997 Toyota Paseo, a car the EPA rates at 29 mpg."

http://www.wired.com/cars/energy/news/2008/06/hypermilers09

http://howto.wired.com/wiki/Get_More_Than_40_Miles_Per_Gallon_Without_a_Hybrid

Date: 2008-06-11 08:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quasar273.livejournal.com
Interesting stuff. I'd like to see some info on the relative gas costs of AC (I know that's a lot but we really need it in this part of the world -- does it help to turn it on and off as needed?), daytime running lights (I hate those but I'm prejudiced), radio (probably negligible?), etc.

I think driving close behind semis with the engine on still saves some gas and is a teeny bit less dangerous. I've tried that but it required such an intense level of concentration that I couldn't keep it up for long enough to measure the MPG change (I don't have one of those instantaneous gauges). You can definitely feel the wind buffeting; I think you need to be within a couple of car lengths behind the semi, depending on speed. Thus the required concentration and resulting hand cramps.

In traffic jams, if there are only two lanes going it sometimes works to get up beside a semi in the other lane. Then you can both do a nice slow crawl and let a buffer space open in front of you, and nobody will be able to dart into the gap.

I am also amused that this link was posted by the same guy who let air out of my tires because they were 20% overpressure compared to the car maker's recommendations, even though they were still well below the maximum on the sidewalls. Hmmph!

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