Did another MPG run today. Took out the rear and passenger seats, folded in the right side mirror. This so I could simulate less gas in the tank, and an L model.
I drove a 75-mile loop around St. Louis on highways, during the early morning. I tried to keep speed at 45 in fifth gear, but probably averaged more like 46 or 47 MPH. I didn't use any special hypermiling techniques. This was 1800 RPM, according to my tach. My rear tires are 12", but the fronts are 13" (155/80x13), for 4.5% more gearing. There was little or no breeze when I started and ended the test. Temp was about 60 - 65. I corrected the odometer with 20 miles of mileage markers, which were marked every .2 miles.
Result: for 75 miles, I used 1.2 gallons of gas. This comes to 62.5 MPG. I was very careful to fill the tank completely both times; if anything, I might have put in a couple thimblefuls more the second time.
The moral of this story: low RPMs and less wind resistance really matter. I doubt that the seat removal was much of a factor, if any.
For my next run, I will install a 45,000-volt coil and gap the plugs 10% larger, for a bigger spark. This was successful with a previous Subaru, to the tune of a 10% mileage improvement. I'll drive at 55, like the first test.
I drove a 75-mile loop around St. Louis on highways, during the early morning. I tried to keep speed at 45 in fifth gear, but probably averaged more like 46 or 47 MPH. I didn't use any special hypermiling techniques. This was 1800 RPM, according to my tach. My rear tires are 12", but the fronts are 13" (155/80x13), for 4.5% more gearing. There was little or no breeze when I started and ended the test. Temp was about 60 - 65. I corrected the odometer with 20 miles of mileage markers, which were marked every .2 miles.
Result: for 75 miles, I used 1.2 gallons of gas. This comes to 62.5 MPG. I was very careful to fill the tank completely both times; if anything, I might have put in a couple thimblefuls more the second time.
The moral of this story: low RPMs and less wind resistance really matter. I doubt that the seat removal was much of a factor, if any.
For my next run, I will install a 45,000-volt coil and gap the plugs 10% larger, for a bigger spark. This was successful with a previous Subaru, to the tune of a 10% mileage improvement. I'll drive at 55, like the first test.
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