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The computer MPG on my car has been 7.5% optimistic for my entire ownership (5500 miles so far) but I have seen some 'blips' as high as 12% out. I put this down to gremlins in the recording system. My MPG via fuelly is pretty consistent, so I'm happy its not more serious than a gremlin. I'm keeping tabs on the average discrepancy as it is possible to enter a correction factor into my computer, to make it read closer to real measured figures.
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Well I ran the tank down as far as I dare go, I squeezed the most fuel in I've ever got and the dash MPG was about 2-3 Mpg higher than the fuelly calculations. Safe to say then that it's working fine, and the discrepancy was probably due to the fact that I used a backstreet filling station with a pump that maybe hadn't been calibrated in a while? Who knows, but at least I know the cars calculations are working ok, the 2-3 mpg optimism being perfectly normal of course.
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Draigflag: I don't expect the in-dash fuel-economy meter to be accurate, and mine isn't. My Audi Q5 3.0 TDI's display is very optimistic. According to a close friend of mine who is a retired Naval Aviator, test pilot, and rocket scientist (no joke), it's costly to build and implement an accurate fuel flow meter, so car manufacturers don't. They just give you a "pert near" reading as guide. Even though it displays precision to 1/10 of a liter per 100 km or 1/10 MPG, it is certainly far, far less accurate.
Although I have no way of knowing what's really happening on your end for sure, I believe the similarity between your computer read-out's MPG and your actual MPG was likely a pleasant coincidence while it coincided. |
You can add a correction factor to your AUDi's mpg display. GOOGLE VAGCOM trip computer mpg correction. This can be done on all VAG cars using current version of the infotainment unit.
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luckypants: Can you tell me where I can get VAGCOM cable and required software? I'd like to get into these VAGCOM mods.
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It can't be that difficult to devise an accurate reading, Scangauge seem to have a pretty accurate computer model, why can't they use that on other cars for more accurate readings?
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Scangauge only has tools at its disposal which are already present on the vehicle. There are no fuel flow meters on cars, and all MPG meters only use the pulse width from the car's ECU to the fuel injectors as a measure of fuel flow. So the scangauge and all other MPG meters (in production vehicles) are limited by the accuracy of this signal.
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I have found the SEAT forum very helpful in this regard, particularly for the MK3 Leon which has the same infotainment system as current Audis. You might like to search on SEAT Cupra.net - SEAT Forum for some help. I have come across some good Audi and Golf forums when researching the same sort of issue. I do not have the VAG-Com software, I paid one one for the SEAT forum members who has the software and cable to make my mods. Here is a video demonstrating making the change to the MPG display of the trip computer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RY8nfw6CTgI to show how it can be done. I'll be getting my Leon corrected to be closer to my measured fuelly average soon. (my car shows a long term average of 61.7 UK mpg, fuelly says 56.7, needs an 8% correction or thereabouts!) HTH |
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