Is my mileage normal?
Short distances are the biggest kiiler of fuel mileage and engines. So if your travel time is 10 mins or less, you can expect poor mileage.
Personal example: 15yrs ago I had an AWD Plymouth Colt Vista w/a 5-sp. When my daily trip was only 2 miles one way the car gave only 15mpg. Then I moved to nearly 20 miles from work and my mileage jumped up to 23!! An 8mpg difference. I thought that pretty significant.
Yup, sounds about right; my Mazda3 has the 2.0 liter motor and a 5-Speed (a car that is significantly quicker than my neighbor's Mazda3 2.3 automatic by the way), and I typically get about 25-27 mpg when I drive mostly city driving (a rare occurrence in my case). Currently my "normal" driving environment is about 50/50 which yields fuel economy in the 29-30 mpg range, and before I got laid off and changed jobs I was doing about 90% highway driving where my fuel economy was up between 33 and 35 miles per gallon. Not too shabby.
What is it that you think you know? Asked another way, are you willing to go through life believing you understand how some process (induction systems of modern engines in this case) works and not look at data that might suggest you are making an incorrect assumption on said process?
Last edited by shipo; Apr 11, 2011 at 08:51 AM.
I just don't understand how it is that so many folks have been sucked in by the "lower restriction equals better fuel economy" urban legend. Those that should know better seem to think if they repeat it often enough it will become fact. Nope, just fallacy.
This does seem low to me. I have a 2009 Sedan GT and do about the same city/highway mix that you do and I can get 500+ km per tank....
- Is your car an Automatic, or do you have a Manual transmission?
- How do you manage to drive 90% city when you live in Alberta?
1. Automatic.
2. Uh, because I live in a city....
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kam1996
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Jul 10, 2008 04:51 AM



