Today I took a run at 60 MPH with the rear windows open. I know, I know, this introduces two variables, speed and wind drag. But I wanted to get away from 55 MPH to something more real-world; plus most of the road course I am using has a 60 MPH speed limit, with one small section being 55.
I decided to try to eliminate one variable simply by predicting what my mileage would be, based on experience with this car. Yesterday at 55 MPH it got 58.5 MPG, so I felt it was reasonable to predict that at 60 MPH it would go down a bit. I chose 55 MPG, a 3.5 MPG loss. This is of course tentative and arguable; I will do another run, windows closed at 60 MPH, in the future to give a baseline.
The car is as it was yesterday, and the wind conditions the same; virtually nonexistent. My road course is a big circle, so that should practically eliminate wind as an issue.
So the only variable left is open windows. I drove the exact same course I always do, which again came to 84.5 miles. Fuel consumption was 1.78 gallons, giving a figure of 47.97 MPG. This was much lower than I predicted. Another member claims better mileage with the rear windows open, due to lower turbulence at the rear of the car. I think this run calls that into serious question. First of all, I should have gotten the same or better mileage if this was true; i.e. 55 MPG (my predicted figure) or better. Instead I got 48 MPG. This is much too large a discrepancy to be accounted for by a 5 MPH change in speed, I feel.
Bear in mind that I use the same course all the time, in basically windless conditions, so two big variables are eliminated. Also I am now very careful to fill the tank to the same super-full level every time. I would suspect that the claim of better MPG with rear windows open is based on a less-rigorous testing methodology; the same course, wind conditions, attempts to keep consistent speed, and tank filling method must be used to have verifiable results. And also loaded vehicle weight, mainly meaning # of passengers. A full car w/windows closed will most likely get lower mileage than a driver-only car with windows open.
So from now on my MPG runs will be with windows closed.
I decided to try to eliminate one variable simply by predicting what my mileage would be, based on experience with this car. Yesterday at 55 MPH it got 58.5 MPG, so I felt it was reasonable to predict that at 60 MPH it would go down a bit. I chose 55 MPG, a 3.5 MPG loss. This is of course tentative and arguable; I will do another run, windows closed at 60 MPH, in the future to give a baseline.
The car is as it was yesterday, and the wind conditions the same; virtually nonexistent. My road course is a big circle, so that should practically eliminate wind as an issue.
So the only variable left is open windows. I drove the exact same course I always do, which again came to 84.5 miles. Fuel consumption was 1.78 gallons, giving a figure of 47.97 MPG. This was much lower than I predicted. Another member claims better mileage with the rear windows open, due to lower turbulence at the rear of the car. I think this run calls that into serious question. First of all, I should have gotten the same or better mileage if this was true; i.e. 55 MPG (my predicted figure) or better. Instead I got 48 MPG. This is much too large a discrepancy to be accounted for by a 5 MPH change in speed, I feel.
Bear in mind that I use the same course all the time, in basically windless conditions, so two big variables are eliminated. Also I am now very careful to fill the tank to the same super-full level every time. I would suspect that the claim of better MPG with rear windows open is based on a less-rigorous testing methodology; the same course, wind conditions, attempts to keep consistent speed, and tank filling method must be used to have verifiable results. And also loaded vehicle weight, mainly meaning # of passengers. A full car w/windows closed will most likely get lower mileage than a driver-only car with windows open.
So from now on my MPG runs will be with windows closed.
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