Originally posted by Safety Guy
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Gas Mileage for a Festiva?
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In the 1970's when I knew I would be going thru Rocky Mountain passes(12,000ft) & to Mt. Evans(14,000+feet), with all my cars I'd have my mechanic lean out my air-fuel ratio. I would avoid the black smoke & sputtering engines running on too rich a mixture while at quadruple digit altitudes. Sometimes I would get 40MPG running thru up & down 7 to 9000 foot passes. When I would come down off the Rockies into the plains east of the Rockies, both my Plymouth Champ & Ford Festiva gave me their best MPG. I figured the engine was well tuned plus there would be considerably lower air drag.
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Higher altitude also requires less octane.Festiva: Because even my dog can build a Honda.
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'90 L. B8ME/Kia Rio 5 speed. Rio/Aspire suspension swap. :-D
'81 Mustang. Inline 6, Automatic.
'95 Eagle Summit Wagon. 4G64 Powered.
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Originally posted by GenevaDirt View Postlitesong......you are actually doing the math when figuring out the milage right? Not just saying that at half a tank I have 250 miles so I am getting 50 miles per gallon...right? I am sorry but I am really amazed at the milage.
Hi GenevaDirt....After the 51.8MPG tank going over 5500 foot Chinook Pass & a 45MPG tank, today a tank with 3 days of driving with an ascent to ~ 2800 feet came in at 52.0MPG! That timing belt is working wonders.
Wonder how long the topnotch tuning will last. All 3 tanks were using Costco gas, here in Washington state. Maybe it'll last pretty good since the car is 20 years old.
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Up up & away...to high MPG
Well...another 50+MPG Festiva tank came in for my carbureted 4 speed 1988 Festiva. That makes 3 out of the last 4 tanks that exceeded 50MPG! This tank is the lowest so far, being 'only' 50.8MPG. But here are the particulars...Originally posted by litesong View PostAfter the 51.8MPG tank going over 5500 foot Chinook Pass
The tank included 2 warmups over 3 days, NOT a 'travel gas stop & continue'. The tank also included a roundtrip from near sea level, over 4059 foot Stevens Pass, descent to 600 foot elevation Columbia River, 5500 foot North Cascades Nat'l Park's Washington Pass, an 800+ foot rise & fall to Chelan, Washington, six hundred feet of rise & fall around Ross Lake & a number of rises & falls in the North Cascades loop. All totaled, the 50.8MPG tank included a calculated gain & loss of 10,300 feet(11,000+ feet in reality?)!
All three tanks were on Costco gas.
Again, if your Festiva is giving low MPG, try new sparkplug wires & a new timing belt. My Festiva is performing better than when it was new...& it was great when it was new.Last edited by litesong; 08-08-2008, 09:43 AM.
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I'm with you on the new wires and timing belt. I'm getting 50+ out of mine as well after a timing belt change, new wires, points and coil. (old coil wire actually rusted through and left me stranded several weeks ago.) (Timing belt was replaced when a new water pump was put in about a month ago.)
It's an automatic w/air.
It's all flat here. No hills. Very little braking. Gas was from wherever was convenient.
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[QUOTE=gotrootdude;160391]Timing belt was replaced when a new water pump was put in about a month ago.[QUOTE]
I had my waterpump changed with the timing belt too. Even tho the waterpump was 20 years old, it looked to be in nice condition at 80,000 miles.
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