Fuelly Forums

Fuelly Forums (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/)
-   General Fuel Topics (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/)
-   -   I wonder who spent the most money on gas this year on fuely? (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/i-wonder-who-spent-the-most-money-on-gas-this-year-on-fuely-17113.html)

tootal2 12-21-2014 10:19 AM

I wonder who spent the most money on gas this year on fuely?
 
who spent the most money on gas this year?
I spent 434.00 on gas this year

Draigflag 12-21-2014 10:24 AM

Probably a trucker/hauler. Won't be anyone in the US with those fuel prices thats for sure, since June ive spent almost $900 and thats in a car that does 62 MPG, and I barely use it! ;)

Matt715 12-21-2014 02:39 PM

I've often wondered the same thing, but also who has logged the most miles.

I've spent just over $3,600 so far and I should be adding another $200-300 to that total before the new year.

Jcp385 12-21-2014 04:14 PM

I'll come out at just over $1000...at $991 now and I'll have one more fillup this year, should be about $20, putting me at around $1010.

Draigflag 12-21-2014 10:57 PM

Fuel is far too cheap in the US!

Jcp385 12-22-2014 08:11 AM

I'm OK with that :D

andyrobo 12-22-2014 08:16 AM

That's an interesting question. I imagine the person who spent the most is someone who had a data entry error in their logs. We sometimes see people entering their mileage in the gallon field (imagine 23,453 gallons). We are working on a system to identify these and mark them as questionable and remove them from the results. Once the algorithm is dialed in we will then validate data on submissions and try to alert users with a prompt saying "It looks like you might have put your odometer value in the gallon field."

Maybe we can run a report and filter out obvious ones for 2014?

Draigflag 12-22-2014 08:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jcp385 (Post 180958)
I'm OK with that :D

Yes I bet you are ;) My friend has spent close to $30,000 on fuel this year in his little van.

andyrobo 12-23-2014 10:05 PM

Here is a list after filtering out extreme values, it looks like the Top 10 is dominated by commercial drivers. The first one is not in the US so his totals are reflected in his currency.

1. $91,000 https://www.fuelly.com/car/mercedes-b...ckearon/164647
2. $54,500 https://www.fuelly.com/truck/freightl...ngeALot/290593
3. $48,000 https://www.fuelly.com/car/ford/f-350...fgm3028/284603
4. $46,417 https://www.fuelly.com/car/chevrolet/...Dorsey1/242161
5. $34,740 https://www.fuelly.com/truck/freightl...ryan723/300971
6. $33,000 https://www.fuelly.com/car/internatio...ngeALot/168104 (same driver as #2)
7. $30,460 https://www.fuelly.com/car/volvo/670/2009/AZVern/276886
8. $27,963 https://www.fuelly.com/car/dodge/ram_.../TerryP/138353
9. $27,032 https://www.fuelly.com/car/ford/f-350...ineroid/187636
10. $23.539 https://www.fuelly.com/truck/freightl...edExMan/309639

Draigflag 12-24-2014 12:09 AM

Cool interesting! Thanks for posting! :)

Tenderfoot 12-24-2014 03:31 PM

Cost per mile might be more meaningful for a measurement of efficiency. The high cost per gallon or mega miles driven per year deserve more sympathy for cost/year awards.
Tenderfoot

gundamit 12-28-2014 04:03 AM

I'm going to come in just under $2K for the 27K miles for my first year in the Mazda 3. If fuel prices stay under $3 a gallon I expect my average per mile cost will slip under 7 cents next year. Once OPEC eases up on Russia, the shale oil production in the US will probably have dropped off due to the price. Then, unless there is another global economic slowdown, $100/barrel of oil will take us right back where we started. Enjoy sub $3 gas while it lasts.

Draigflag 12-28-2014 04:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gundamit (Post 181003)
I'm going to come in just under $2K for the 27K miles for my first year in the Mazda 3. If fuel prices stay under $3 a gallon I expect my average per mile cost will slip under 7 cents next year. Once OPEC eases up on Russia, the shale oil production in the US will probably have dropped off due to the price. Then, unless there is another global economic slowdown, $100/barrel of oil will take us right back where we started. Enjoy sub $3 gas while it lasts.

Im getting only slightly better mileage than you, and yet my cost per mile for fuel is double! :banghead:

Jcp385 12-28-2014 06:01 AM

Neat to look at those chart-toppers. Didn't expect hot shot trucks in there! Thanks!

rosko 12-29-2014 12:50 AM

$3370 for me at 0.136pm.. I'm in Australia, and drive a 2010 Mazda 3 Diesel.. Currently I'm averaging at around 43-44mpg.. I'm hoping to see an improvement in my economy, as I've recently changed tyres. Be interesting to see if I start getting the 45mpg+ I used to get. All the best from Australia :D

jbelcourt 01-06-2015 04:43 PM

Just joined today but I've been tracking my services and fuel costs since acquiring this car and beginning the rebuild in June 2013 with ACAR on my phone. Unfortunately I corrupted my SDCard and lost my backup so I lost everything I had. My records now start at March of 2014.

From March 6, 2014 through December 23, 2014 I racked up 5,525 miles (pretty much all city) for a total of $1,383.32. I fill up once a week so I'd guess I probably spent about $1,700 or so this year on gas.

Doesn't help that I average about 15 MPG but it sure is a treat to drive!

aelfwyne 01-10-2015 01:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by andyrobo (Post 180959)
That's an interesting question. I imagine the person who spent the most is someone who had a data entry error in their logs. We sometimes see people entering their mileage in the gallon field (imagine 23,453 gallons). We are working on a system to identify these and mark them as questionable and remove them from the results. Once the algorithm is dialed in we will then validate data on submissions and try to alert users with a prompt saying "It looks like you might have put your odometer value in the gallon field."

Maybe we can run a report and filter out obvious ones for 2014?

Would like to see that algorithm implemented. Was looking at 2015 Fiat 500s, and noticed someone with a Fiat 500 Abarth had better MPG than my 500 Sport. Then I noticed he had an obvious error with missed fuel-ups, but didn't flag it as a missed fuel-up. Thus it listed one of his fuelups as around 100mpg, which is impossible in ANY Fiat unless you're driving down a mountain with a tailwind.

8$PG 04-17-2015 01:32 AM

I haven't spent anything on fuel since we sold our last fossile fuelled car a month ago and very little in the last six months since we bought the electric car Nissan Leaf (used). It works very well. We've driven it 13'000 miles already around a radius of 190miles from home. No need for fuel at all.

Draigflag 04-17-2015 05:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 8$PG (Post 182839)
I haven't spent anything on fuel since we sold our last fossile fuelled car a month ago and very little in the last six months since we bought the electric car Nissan Leaf (used). It works very well. We've driven it 13'000 miles already around a radius of 190miles from home. No need for fuel at all.

How does it work out cost wise compared to a conventional car? Whenever I work out the comparative costs, the battery lease works out at almost double the cost of fuel in a normal car.

8$PG 04-17-2015 06:04 AM

Replacement of the battery costs 5000EUR today and lasts 200'000km. That is about 0,025EUR/km. Even if you have to change the battery early at say 100kkm that's less than half of what a typical car runs in fuel. Batteries are becoming better and prices are going down rapidly. Electricity is about 0,02EUR/km.

Fossile fuel is about 0,12EUR/km and are going up for a non diesel mid sized car. Soon in about 30-40years there wont be much left for transportation and it will be really expensive. If you have a newer smaller really efficient diesel today and mostly drive long trips on small country roads maybe the fuel cost is 0,06EUR/km, in that case the running cost is about the same.

There is a lease offer here of about 250EUR/month for a new Renault Zoe. Leasing only the batteries is not that popular since you are stuck with the monthly fee as long as you own the car.

Draigflag 04-17-2015 06:17 AM

Yes it's far better to buy the battery, but that makes the car very expensive initially, and as you say, if it fails early, you are responsible for replacing it. The biggest downside for most people is the range, my average trip is about 120 miles, so I couldn't even do one trip on a full charge, and at highway speeds, a full charge can last just one hour. I'd get really cheesed off if my phone needed charging one every hour! I think they are great for short city trips though, helps keep pollution levels low. I'm not sure if it's the same there, but in the UK there are already lots of free charge points.

8$PG 04-17-2015 10:13 AM

I know what people say. They want to keep their options open and spontaniously drive from glasgow to london pulling a horse trailer through a field if they feel like it.

Im just saying it really works for daily driving and more 25000miles/year in our case. A planned quick charge along the way having a bite to eat or a coffe, go shopping for grocerys etc instead of arriving tired is just fine. For a daily commute, you could not afford the gas to have a longer one anyway. Longer trips are really better by train.

amitvarghese 09-26-2015 12:31 PM

  • 150,353.2 Miles Tracked
  • $13,688.62 Total Spent
  • 2004 Scion XB - MY BOX

Draigflag 09-26-2015 02:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by amitvarghese (Post 185453)
  • 150,353.2 Miles Tracked
  • $13,688.62 Total Spent
  • 2004 Scion XB - MY BOX

Great value! My previous car cost me about $16,000 (converted from UK currency) in fuel and I only did 58,000 miles, so you almost got an extra 100,000 miles for free! ;)


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 03:57 PM.

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