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Raw mpg is still impressive, this is just another statistic. If you can get a heavy vehicle to get a large number, then it says something. example - light car vs. heavy car: 30 mpg * 1800# / 1000 = 54 30 mpg * 3200# / 1000 = 96 (that 1800# car would have to get over 53 mpg to get to this number - as some of you do!). The correlation between the utility of a vehicle and it's weight merits a thread of its own. Or maybe you can multiply by the average 'occupant seat-miles' of actual usage. :) |
we should definetly figure out some kind of a formula for weight and mpg. Because some of us don't have 3 cylenders, lightweight car, manual transmission, honda engine, small displacement motor. With the formula with can show who made more progress. Of course the thing under our sigs that showed a % hypermiling was accurate too.
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I don't really mind which formula we use for efficiency and weight, or whether the figure rises or declines relative to efficiency. The interesting information comes from comparing multiple vehicles as long as we're using the same formula. In lb-miles per gallon, the Fireflea is: 1800# * 59.3 / 1000 = 108.519 JanGeo suggests factoring in frontal area as well, though it would be more accurate if you factored in CdA rather than just A. |
finally people are responding :) anyway are we doing this with or without drivers?
also, metro, could you take everyones statistics and put them in the first post of the thread? like to consolidate the information? adding the frontal area or cd or both could be too much. in the end your just factoring them out. but if a higher number is better then you want to multiply the number we came up with by the product of the frontal area and the cd. the problem is that most of us no longer have the cd that our cars came with from the factory. so maybe just frontal area and well will then have our generalized number for the efficiency of the drivetrain and aerodynamics. in the end these are the things that all of us tend to modify anyway right? i think it would be cool to see the significance of the statistics. the efficiency-weight product and efficiency-weight-size product next to each other for each car. |
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I'll compile a summary in the top post in a day or so when more people have had time to respond. |
Sorry for being dense, but I can't wrap my brain around that lb-mile per gallon number. It doesn't make any sense to me at all. I can understand people wanting more credit based on the type of vehicle they drive, but wouldn't a point system make more sense than a single screwball measurement?
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i bet there are a lot of things that can be done to the bigger cars that havent been thought about just because there are not many minds out there that would think to do so. <--*continues to ponder* |
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