Reduce Your Electrical Load, Save Gas - Page 3 - Fuelly Forums

Click here to see important news regarding the aCar App

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
 
Old 09-19-2009, 07:36 AM   #21
Registered Member
 
JanGeo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,444
Country: United States
Location: Tiverton, RI
Send a message via Yahoo to JanGeo
Yeah white roof on a sunny day 80-90 degrees (10-20 above ambiant) - interior dashboard temps from sunlight shining through the windshield 130-160 degrees.

I see fuel consumption at idle for the heater fan about 0.02gph increase. I have a 160watt radio in my xB Factory stock so that loads down the engine a little too. Headlights 0.05 increase (0.15gph lights off 0.20gph lights on) the extra digit on the upgrade SGII really help nail the fuel usage.

Best way to test electrical load of the entire car which I will do some day is to connect a good 14 volt charger with amp meter to the battery to unload the alternator completely and see what the ECU and fuel pump and ignition take first then switch on the other electrical loads. Should be really interesting to see how low the idle fuel use becomes when all the electrical loads are removed.
__________________

JanGeo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 08:43 AM   #22
Registered Member
 
theholycow's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 6,624
Country: United States
Send a message via ICQ to theholycow Send a message via AIM to theholycow Send a message via MSN to theholycow Send a message via Yahoo to theholycow
Quote:
Originally Posted by JanGeo View Post
Yeah white roof on a sunny day 80-90 degrees (10-20 above ambiant) - interior dashboard temps from sunlight shining through the windshield 130-160 degrees.
What color is your interior?
__________________

__________________
This sig may return, some day.
theholycow is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 06:38 PM   #23
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 557
Country: United States
Quote:
Originally Posted by theholycow View Post
Are you sure about that math?
I was sure, but that was several cars and about 10 years ago.
For a while I had a strain gauge on the front motor mount of my first Passat TDI sedan. I had set the maximum strain load value (span) to the highest load I was able to get on a dyno (150 lb*ft). Zero strain was set with the engine off (offset). Steady-state 30 mph in 5th indicated a bit over 1/10 the full scale 150 lb*ft or just over 15 lb*ft.
15 lb*ft x 900 rpm / 5252 = 2.6 hp.

The engine and transmission I have now in the Oily Rag is the same make, model and state of tune as that one on which I had the strain gauge in 1998 so maybe it is presumptuous, but I expect that the power output required for a 1996 model with a 1996 engine would be similar to my present 1995 model powered by a nearly identical (EGR circuit is different) 1997 engine.
Lug_Nut is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 07:06 PM   #24
Registered Member
 
GasSavers_JoeBob's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 698
Country: United States
Quote:
Originally Posted by spotaneagle View Post

my car is much warmer in the winter, if anyone has a black car you know what im talking about,

please does someone have a black car here that can verify this?

I have a black car (1984 Lincoln Town Car, no longer driving it due to dead transmission and my wife finds it much harder to get into and out of compared to the Cad Eldorado) and I can definitely REFUTE this!

I purchased the car in '02. The heater core sprung a leak a year or two later. Since the car was assembled around the heater core, it is either disassemble the whole damn car (at least the instrument panel, which is a day or two job if you don't do it every day), or pay the nice man $500+ to do it (been there and done that back in the '90s with an '85 Continental). Consequently, I drove that car for several winters with no heater. I live in the high desert (Lancaster, CA), and drive to Tehachapi, CA every day. Lots of cold (regularly in the teens in the winter), ice and sometimes snow. I've also made the same commute in my white with stainless steel roof '83 Cad, which also has some heater problems. Both cars are IDENTICALLY cold.

I haven't actually measured the difference in temperature, but in the summer, sitting in the sun in my driveway, the black Lincoln feels considerably hotter than the white Cad.

As an aside, when I was a little kid we had a navy blue 1949 Ford. I have a distinct memory of a very hot, sunny summer day, licking my finger, placing it on the car, and hearing the spit sizzle. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to duplicate this with the cars I have now...
__________________
"We are forces of chaos and anarchy. Everything they say we are we are, and we are very proud of ourselves!" -- Jefferson Airplane

Dick Naugle says: 1. Prepare food fresh. 2. Serve customers fast. 3. Keep place clean.



GasSavers_JoeBob is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 07:14 PM   #25
Registered Member
 
GasSavers_JoeBob's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 698
Country: United States
In spite of the car being black, I could get 20+ mpg on the freeway with the Lincoln, with the AC on. Ya just gotta keep yer foot outta it...
__________________
"We are forces of chaos and anarchy. Everything they say we are we are, and we are very proud of ourselves!" -- Jefferson Airplane

Dick Naugle says: 1. Prepare food fresh. 2. Serve customers fast. 3. Keep place clean.



GasSavers_JoeBob is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 07:43 PM   #26
Site Team / Moderator
 
Jay2TheRescue's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 4,723
Country: United States
Location: Northern Virginia
Arrow

Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeBob View Post
In spite of the car being black, I could get 20+ mpg on the freeway with the Lincoln, with the AC on. Ya just gotta keep yer foot outta it...
Aaah, those full size Ford vehicles... I'm salivating over the day when I can finally get my hands on my late grandfather's Grand Marquis. It had only a few thousand miles on it when he died, and I'm sure its got less than 10,000 miles on it now.
__________________








Jay2TheRescue is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-19-2009, 10:10 PM   #27
Registered Member
 
GasSavers_JoeBob's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 698
Country: United States
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jay2TheRescue View Post
Aaah, those full size Ford vehicles... I'm salivating over the day when I can finally get my hands on my late grandfather's Grand Marquis. It had only a few thousand miles on it when he died, and I'm sure its got less than 10,000 miles on it now.
Nice thing about the big Fords, they are rugged as hell. My '85 Continental (not technically full size---actually it was a mid sized body with full size Ford running gear) went over 400k miles before it wore out - the transmission thing with the Town Car was a fluke (may have been exacerbated by some EOC ...), the car had just passed the CA smog test less than a month before.
__________________
"We are forces of chaos and anarchy. Everything they say we are we are, and we are very proud of ourselves!" -- Jefferson Airplane

Dick Naugle says: 1. Prepare food fresh. 2. Serve customers fast. 3. Keep place clean.



GasSavers_JoeBob is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-20-2009, 07:08 AM   #28
Registered Member
 
JanGeo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,444
Country: United States
Location: Tiverton, RI
Send a message via Yahoo to JanGeo
Quote:
Originally Posted by theholycow View Post
What color is your interior?
Standard xB - black interior but the windshield is more vertical than almost any other vehicle on the road so not much hits inside during the summer high sun angle only hits the dash which of course is black like most dashboards. Windshield is slightly tinted. The side windows are darker and really get warm so much so that you can feel them radiating heat inside the car. The Polar White color is very white and reflects sunlight like crazy and on a very sunny day you can rest your hand on the painted surface and it may feel a little warm - any silver of black painted body would burn your hand under the same sunlight conditions. I actually polish it in sunlight sometimes because it does not get too warm.

Don't forget that dark surfaces also radiate heat faster so once the winter sun goes down it cools off quickly too. One other thing to consider is that an IR temperature gun responds to the radiated heat and will give slightly different readings of temperature with a white and black surface even if they are the same temperature. It will read higher with a black surface than a white surface with them at the same temperature.
JanGeo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-20-2009, 12:56 PM   #29
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 427
Country: United States
Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeBob View Post
I have a black car (1984 Lincoln Town Car, no longer driving it due to dead transmission and my wife finds it much harder to get into and out of compared to the Cad Eldorado) and I can definitely REFUTE this!

I purchased the car in '02. The heater core sprung a leak a year or two later. Since the car was assembled around the heater core, it is either disassemble the whole damn car (at least the instrument panel, which is a day or two job if you don't do it every day), or pay the nice man $500+ to do it (been there and done that back in the '90s with an '85 Continental). Consequently, I drove that car for several winters with no heater. I live in the high desert (Lancaster, CA), and drive to Tehachapi, CA every day. Lots of cold (regularly in the teens in the winter), ice and sometimes snow. I've also made the same commute in my white with stainless steel roof '83 Cad, which also has some heater problems. Both cars are IDENTICALLY cold.

I haven't actually measured the difference in temperature, but in the summer, sitting in the sun in my driveway, the black Lincoln feels considerably hotter than the white Cad.

As an aside, when I was a little kid we had a navy blue 1949 Ford. I have a distinct memory of a very hot, sunny summer day, licking my finger, placing it on the car, and hearing the spit sizzle. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to duplicate this with the cars I have now...

it depends on the car, and the type of paint used on the car, keep in mind a lincoln has alot more air in it to heat, and material than a 2300 lb plastic car, cold tends to keep steel cold no matter what climate you are in, alot more steel tends to stay alot colder, plus the amount of sunlight that hits your interior thats darks, plus alot more door area to seal, I guarantee my car is alot more air tight than your lincoln, Refute that
spotaneagle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-20-2009, 12:58 PM   #30
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 427
Country: United States
the equation goes 2300 lbs to heat up with the sun vs 4600 lbs, 2x as much heating?
__________________

spotaneagle is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Notes speedracer12 Fuelly Web Support and Community News 2 03-14-2010 08:58 AM
Basic Stats poorboymeyer Fuelly Web Support and Community News 2 09-22-2009 08:19 AM
Incorrect Milage Calcuatlion PatM Fuelly Web Support and Community News 4 07-17-2009 07:21 PM
total fuel cost for fill-up instead of price per gallon EmptyH Fuelly Web Support and Community News 1 08-26-2008 11:14 AM
An American Perspective on Driving in Canada rh77 General Discussion (Off-Topic) 28 03-24-2006 09:42 PM

» Fuelly Android Apps
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.3


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:21 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.