Car weight and MPGs
As I stated in my post about my trip mileage in my odyessy, I averaged 36ish mpg.
normally this vehicle gets about 19mpg. So that is an 89% improvement over the vehicle's average. When I had my civic(1993DX automatic) I would average about 33mpg and get about 41mpg on a highway trip like that. That is only a 24% improvement. I'm no engineer by any means, but this leads me to believe that the heavier vehicle got the better mileage increase because it weighs more. The extra weight must have helped me keep my momentum during gliding periods, which kept my speed up when it was time to give it some gas. Has anyone figured this one out already or posted about it? Maybe this is part of the reason the GM 3.8L cars do so well. |
The weight of the vehicle doesn't really matter when it's cruising on the highway. It matters when you're accelerating. So when you're doing a long trip, the larger heavier vehicles will catch up (somewhat) to the mileage of the smaller ones. City mileage goes to the smaller cars, for the reverse reasons.
|
Quote:
extra weight afford some ease in navigating hills as you are able to store more energy |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Decent aero numbers help as well but I am talking about local models here so it may be different for the cars you are talking about. Following Moore's Law you can reasonably expect a decent upgrade in engine management capacity about every model or two at the outside. This may account for the differences between the two Honda cars. Pete. |
Instead of weight consider this ballistically.
Sectional density is the relationship between the aerodynamics of any projectile and the mass relaitive to the frontal area. It takes more energy to get the heavier projectile to the same velocity, but the heavier projectile retains that energy for a greater distance. Where greater sectional density begins to have a negative effect is when you have to navigate grades that are too steep to utilize the energy cost of climbing the grade to coast down the same grade. If you must waste energy downhill to keep your speed low enough to avoid a citation, then you will never get the mileage you would if the grade was not soo steep. In those situations where grades are more steep the difference in mileage will favor the lighter vehicle, because it will not need braking energy to reduce it's maximum speed downhill, because its sectional density is lower, which makes the aero resistance sufficient to keep the maximum speed to a more acceptable level. DFCO will help on downgrades to eliminate fuel consumption on the downhill leg of the combination. The gradient of the hill or mountain as well as the engine power available can be used to get better mileage than even a flat terrain, but as the grade percentage increases beyond a couple of percent then mileage will fall off almost without exception. My normal situation consists of grade changes that are never more than an Interstate overpass, with elevation changes of only 100 feet in 20 miles. I have found that my car can climb very slight grades while maintaining over 70 MPG at 45 MPH, while almost maxing out the MPG bar graph at 120-150 on the slight downslopes. This is in my Insight, and it may not apply to other vehicles. regards gary |
Quote:
|
I'd say that the heavier vehicle will see a greater improvement in mileage due to steady speed driving than a lighter vehicle, but the lighter vehicle still gets better mpg.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
However to remedy your point: I put a d16z6 (originally belonging in a 2400lb 94 si) and put it into a 2100lb 94 cx. My mpg was notably better than that of the si and believe me i romped on that car all the time. hit vtec every time i drove the car and went 80 every time i was on a highway. gas logs are still available in my garage. the bottom line to this topic is that every case is different and there are too many counter examples to make a hard fast rule in the applications, but we do all know how things work in theory. |
Wait, when did we go from GM 3.8 cars to Civics?
Those are polar opposites regarding weight. You can probably throw an extra 50% weight on a GM 3.8 car and barely see a difference in FE. OTOH, you can trim 100 pounds from a Civic and measure a difference... |
^ yes. I've seen the same with my civic compared to my Odyssey 3.5 v6. The Ody doesn't really change with loading, but the civic's mileage changes with minor weight changes. Full tank is about 80 lb heavier than empty, and averages 2-3 mpg lower. Family on board brings a much larger penalty.
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:24 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.