There's a lot of drivel in that thread. Anything about electronics?
A really simple one.
Use your cruise control. Like everywhere. I know it sounds silly but most people can't modulate the pedal/throttle anywhere near as good a computer can.
Other than driving like an old lady
Actually some old ladies drive pretty fast. You mean "driving like a hypermiler." :twisted:
You can drive in ways which saves gas without being that "old lady." Let off the gas in anticipation of stops. Never going above the speed limit. No "jackrabbit" starts.
Heck, if I practiced what I preached, I'd probably get an easy 2-4MPG gain. :awe:
Use your cruise control. Like everywhere. I know it sounds silly but most people can't modulate the pedal/throttle anywhere near as good a computer can.
Cruise control is not good for fuel economy unless you live in the salt flats.
As soon as you hit a hill, the car uses more and more throttle to try and keep the car at the same speed. if the person behind the wheel is fuel conscious they will just keep their foot at the same position on the gas and lose some speed climbing the hill.
The best way possible to improve fuel economy of any given vehicle is how it's driven. Period.
I get great fuel range out of my Maxima but its because I cruise in 6th gear on the highway and even around town when I'm moving well enough.
I can believe it. My CTS reads 99L/100km for any sort of decent acceleration in 1st, and about 40-50L/100km for the same in 2nd. Starts getting better in 3rd, and 4th is pretty much ideal.I actually heard* you get better mpg from a quicker start and short shifts because you get into a higher gear more quickly.
*Could be utter bullshit and/or a figment of my imagination
I actually heard* you get better mpg from a quicker start and short shifts because you get into a higher gear more quickly.
*Could be utter bullshit and/or a figment of my imagination
Which is why I'm not sure that using cruise control is ideal at highway speeds. Hypermiling procedure tends to be constantly speeding up and coasting down rather than the maintenance of any given speed.That has to do with the throttle being a huge restriction.
If you accelerate hard, you have the throttle open and the engine is at it's best efficiency.
The idea is you use alot of fuel in a short time (20%) to get to cruise where you use the least amount of fuel for the remaining 80% of the time. You spend less time in load with a closed throttle.
VS. having a part open throttle under load 100% of the time and taking longer to get to cruise speed where the engine isn't operating efficiently having to suck air through the throttle restriction.
It depends on the vehicle. Some vehicles have no torque so when you have cruise control engaged and you hit an incline, it downshifts a gear just to maintain speed, something that could have been avoided if you were manually modulating the throttle. I'd say use cruise control and see what kind of inclines get the vehicle to downshift, then when you're driving, use cruise control and disable it when approaching those inclines. One thing I like to do is gradually speed up in anticipation of inclines, maintaining a steady throttle position so that when I hit the incline, I lose speed. Better to gain momentum before the hill then to attempt to maintain it when you reach the hill.Which is why I'm not sure that using cruise control is ideal at highway speeds. Hypermiling procedure tends to be constantly speeding up and coasting down rather than the maintenance of any given speed.
I don't believe any gas is used when coasting, even with conventional drivetrains.Howard- remember that alot of people that hypermile do so in hybrid cars where the coast literally uses no gas(uses electric motor) so in a sense that's infinite mpg. But alot of pulse and glide involves light throttle pressure during the glide phase basically depressing the throttle enough to lose speed but very slowly, imperceptible if you were riding as a passenger but for most modern cars and especially hybrids this light amount of throttle is very fuel efficient
Which is why I'm not sure that using cruise control is ideal at highway speeds. Hypermiling procedure tends to be constantly speeding up and coasting down rather than the maintenance of any given speed.
I don't believe any gas is used when coasting, even with conventional drivetrains.
Also, can you provide something to back up your latter statement?