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DRIVER TIPS: Getting Great Gas Mileage

Oct 17, 2005 12:48PM PDT

Hello everyone. The sting of high-priced fuel is getting worse, and now more than ever MPG is becoming an important factor in everyday life. So here's some REAL tips on how to save gas.

TIP 1: Don't Drive Like A Street Racer

Simply put, the harder you put your boot down on the gas, the more fuel your engine will use. Also, the higher your engine is running in RPMs, the more fuel it is consuming per second.

Learn how to pull out in traffic without letting your engine rev up to 5,000 RPM or wherever your redline is. This is very important in multi-carburated, turbocharged, and big-engined cars, because the use of fuel goes up tremendously with a step of the gas.

Also, in diesel engines, the throttle controls the fuel flow directly, so learning to use that tremendous torque curve with a touch of the gas is essential.

TIP 2: A/C OFF Unless You Absolutely Need It

You can argue this all day, but the fact remains. When you switch on your A/C, the Compressor is turned by the engine, and it needs a few foot pounds of torque. This means more drag on the engine, more fuel used, and ultimately, can waste up to 5 miles per gallon, even on an 8 cylinder engine. If the day is cool or warm, you can crack your windows if you have to. If it's cold out, you may be able to use body heat to warm up the interior. If it's freezing out, then you may have no choice but to use the heater. That or wear your winter gear!

TIP 3: Try Not To Put Your Windows Down

While the A/C is worse, when driving at high speeds, putting the windows down can increase aerodynamic drag. This will drop your MPG a bit on the highway. For best results, crack the windows intermittently to freshen the air. Do note that at low speeds, there is not enough drag to warrant sweating your brains and bowels out.

TIP 4: Constant, Steady Speeds

When driving on the highway, maintaining exactly one speed is the best way to save gas. If you speed up, slow down, speed up, slow down, up, down, up, down, etc., you are wasting more fuel on the acceleration than what you saved letting off the gas. You are also getting your passengers car sick. If your car has cruise control, go ahead and use it when traffic is light. It will also save your right foot.

Always be anticipating the actions of the drivers ahead of you. If it looks like they are going to slow down, change lanes if you can. Whatever you do, don't frequently tap the brakes. You waste more gas getting back up to speed. Match speeds with the driver ahead instead. Figure out an average if he/she is yo-yoing speeds.

TIP 5: Inflate Your Tires To The Proper Air Pressure!

When your tires run too low on air, the sidewall bows out and the tread flattens on the contact patch. While this adds grip on sand, fine gravel, mud, and snow, it causes your car to "wallow" more on turns, makes it easier to hydroplane, and in extreme cases can actually cause a tread separation! The flexing of the rubber and threads heats up the tire and provides more rolling resistance, which is bad for tire life and fuel economy. Check your tire pressures regularly and inflate them to the recommended level.

TIP 6: Don't Modify Your Gas Engine With Go-Fast Parts

Most people that do this put a performance chip, upgraded intake, exhaust, bigger injectors, etc. bent on getting more power out of their vehicle. Unfortunately, it also means losing gas mileage. By improving air flow, your gas engine has to improve fuel flow to compensate. Guess what that means? You got it! Less gas mileage.

TIP 7: Suspension Alignment Does More Than You Think

I see many people that have cars that need an alignment. They pull to one side, there's too much toe, maybe the camber is off, etc. but they don't want to spend the money to go get it fixed. Instead, they waste money on tires as they wear out unevenly or too quickly. Also, they may be wasting money on fuel. When there is too much toe, the wheels are pointing inwards or outwards to much. While this is good for cornering if set up right, it is bad for straight-line driving. The tire rubs the tarmac slightly sideways, and will increase your rolling drag and tire wear. While there is normally 0.1 deg. or so of toe, when you have 0.4, 0.5, or maybe a whole degree of toe, you have trouble.

TIP 8: High-Wattage Devices Mean Harder Working Engine

When your engine is running, the electrical system is powered by your car's alternator. With the exception of audio systems that draw power from your car's battery, the more stuff you turn on, the more torque the alternator takes from the engine. If you have a high-watt alternator, it can go up a lot when you have everything turned up. The trick here is not to be running a laptop computer on the cigarette lighter with a loud radio on at night when the high beams are on and the Sat Nav is telling you where to go and the kids are watching a movie on the DVD system.

That's all for now. Just a bit more advice. Aside from the A/C, you have to do everything on the list together to gain fuel mileage. Just getting the alignment done or just inflating your tires correctly won't help.

Discussion is locked

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More tips...
Dec 9, 2005 2:45PM PST

- Avoid filling your tank up to the brim when you don't drive long distance. A full tank adds unnecessary weight to your car. You don't have to fill your tank with 25 gallons of gasoline when all you need is less than a gallon a day.

- Avoid lugging heavy stuffs when you don't need to. You don't have to lug your barbels and dumbels around just to impress your friends.

- Avoid picking up you girlfriend when you don't need her. A 100 lbs. is definitely an added weight to the car.

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gas saving tips
Dec 12, 2005 7:49PM PST

Opps, did Comsumer Reports invade CNET?

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infraredfuelsaver
Jun 22, 2006 5:24AM PDT

Several of my friends mentioned to me about a new device called infraredfuelsaver. I heard the company spent 8 years developing and testing it and it just been released to the Chicago market two weeks ago.

what sucks is you can't get it anywhere except from the company's appointed distributors...

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Has anyone looked into D-1280X?
Jul 19, 2006 9:04PM PDT

A friend gave me some of this to try a few months ago. I usually think stuff like this is BUNK!! Especially after all the scam crap thats already out there. This one seems to work so far for me. I found someone selling it online (http://www.interpacific.biz) Man this thing freaking works! Talk about save gas. I know 10% doesn't seem like much but when you drive as much as I do, it's a big deal.

Am I the only one who has tried this? D1280X at Interpacific. Let me know if anyone else gets a chance at it.

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save on fuel costs
Dec 29, 2006 6:00AM PST

If any one wants to save on fuel costs you should try the MPG-caps from FFi ( Fuel Freedom International ) out of Florida. This stuff works and is EPA registered. Go to milebuster.com. This product does all kinds of good things for the enviroment too.

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I'm going to try it...
Dec 16, 2007 12:48PM PST

If D1280X works well I would love to offer it to people that I sell cars to from my website: http://www.online-auto.net

I'll let you know how i like it ; )

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d-1280x also called fuelwize
Jul 29, 2008 10:10AM PDT

I buy "fuelwize" (new brand name for d-1280x) from www.livinity.com/14594. It has increased fuel milage on our van about 10% and our old car around 14%. Not tremendous, but it helps. They claim an increase in fuel milage and a decrease in emissions. I don't know about the emissions, but our fuel milage has improved. If anyone takes my advice and tries this stuff, just make sure to replace your fuel filter after about 1500-2000 miles (about the time your fuel milage starts dropping). It cleans your tank and lines and the gunk has to go somewhere.

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Omstar D-1280X, Ethos FR, eeFuel / NanoTech / Fuel Legacy
Sep 6, 2008 7:34AM PDT

Yes; Omstar D-1280X was tested and researched extensively against two of the primary competitve products in this category = Synthetic Esters claiming to reduce harmful emissions up to 89% and increase fuel economy by up to 35%.

The bottom line is Omstar D-1280X does in fact work and has 22 years of documented testing and customer testamonials that can be verified and confirmed! AGAIN - Omstar D-1280X Testing and customer testamonials - Can be verified and confirmed! Unlike others!

Other people have realized there is a lot of money and a lot of market share. They have jumped in the fuel additive market with questionable product and even more questionable business practices, diluting the market and creating an environment of questionable credability. Plagerizing Omstar test data, altering customer testamonials to suit there needs - claiming that they are for Ethos/EthosFR or eeFuel/NanoTech/Fuel Lagacy. In fact the principles characters of both these companies Enrique De Vilmore & Dan Atkinson worked for Omstar Enviromental Products until they decided to try to steal the patent information from the Omstar Offices. (I confirmed this with Richard Skaggs President of Omstar) When they failed to do that they both have done their best to replicate the formula and claim that it has been around for years and that it works as good as D-1280X when in fact it does not. eeFuel / NanoTech is NOT NANO TECHNOLOGY, it is made from Synthetic Plant Esters! When YOU, yes YOU do a little research you will find plenty of data on the internet to BLOW HOLES in their stories. They are both ripping off thousands of people who have decided to drink their COOL AID with out doing any Du-Diligence/Research on their so called benefactors!

In order to understand the whole story / history of this business I have researched extensively and talked to a lot of people in the industry. I have met with the president of Omstar - Richard Skaggs and spoken with his Vice President Senator Ray Haynes.
(http://www.sen.ca.gov/ftp/sen/SENATOR/_ARCHIVE_2002/DEPARTING/HAYNES/PROFILE.BCK)

I have talked to Ethos and eeFuel, listend in on their conference calls, and tested their products. All Ethos and eeFuel are about is MLM, MLM, MLM, that's it! It's about money, not credibility!

These guys at Omstar Environmental Products are straight shooters and have big enviromental goals in mind, not so much their pocket books like Ethos and eeFuel. Omstar is a normal business and is about cleaning up pollution and offering solutions. Until there is an alternative to Fossil fuels that makes good ecological sense then were gonna continue to create harmful exhaust emissions. Omstar D-1280X is a short term solution to a long term problem.

Check out www.GreenEcoTek.com
Sales@GreenEcoTek.com - tell em FuelAdditiveMan sent you!

Keep searching for solutions
FuelAdditiveMan

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The Basics...
Apr 25, 2007 5:49PM PDT

25+ years in the car business. Here's some of what I've learned:

1.) Keep your vehicle maintained! The basics: fluids, filters, plugs, tire pressure, wheel alignments. Replacing a clogged air filter can increase your mileage by as much as 10%! Regular tune ups will add an avg. of 4%; but a faulty oxygen sensor can cost you BIG in mpg. Up to 20%!! (a faulty oxygen sensor can also have your engine running so rich (too high fuel% in the fuel/air ratio) that the extra emissions and unburned fuel can lead to a gummed up catalytic converter. They cost around a grand! Tires properly inflated can see you pick up another 3-4%! As temperatures drop, so does your tire pressure. Check it regularly. Using the manufacturer's recommended oil type and viscousity can add 2% to your mpg; but friction is your enemy! Ask about using a lighter oil; and/or synthetics, lower friction

Assuming your O2 sensor is fine, the rest of the tips here in #1 total to around an 18% improvement!

2.) Aerodynamics make a difference! Besides keeping windows up at speeds over 40mph, get rid of that antenna ball, that never used luggage rack, team flags, or any other superfluous crap you may have tacked on to your vehicle. These things cost your mileage a minimum of 5%. Avoid having a "spoiler" on your trunk. They are designed to add stability at high speed by creating more downforce over your rear wheels. This is totally counterproductive with regards to getting max mpg. Plus, they really don't even deliver much downforce until you're traveling over 80. Drive a truck? Keep your tailgate up! I know what you thought and what you've heard; but leaving it up creates a "bubble" once you're at speed that the wind will flow over. And keep your vehicle clean! Get any built up snow off before you leave. And did you know that the airlines wax their planes to save fuel?

3.) Drive sensibly. Avoid "jackrabbit" starts. Pretend you've got a raw egg between your foot and the gas pedal. When it's obvious you'll be coming to a stop ahead, take your foot off the gas pedal! This one also saves excessive brake pad wear. Depending on how guilty you are of bad habits, your ratio of city vs. hwy. driving, & your car's avg. mpg, these two can save you up to 33% on your gas bill!

5.) Use your cruise control (if you've got it) on the highway; and set it for the lowest most reasonable speed. All cars have an optimal speed for maximum mpg/hwy (it varies; depending on size, weight, equipment, load, etc); but the avg. drop in fuel economy is approximately 5 mpg for every 5 mph over 60 mph; and can be as high as 10% less per 5 mph increment.

6.) Avoid excess idling. When your car's idling, you're getting ZERO mpg. Get out of your car instead of using "drive throughs" at the bank and at the fast food joints. Warming your car's engine up generally takes less than one minute. Don't let it sit there running for 10-15! If it's really that cold, invest in an engine block heater. Take care of those little details, THEN start your car. Adjust your mirrors, seat, put on your seatbelt, check through your CDs, settle down the kids, etc. FIRST- then start it up.

7.) Loose the excess baggage. Are you carting around an extra 50-100 lbs. of unneccessary weight in the trunk? (or around your middle?) =8oO There goes another 2% of your mpg.

8.) Plan your trips and keep records. Look for the most efficient and/or direct routes prior to leaving. Combine chores whenever possible. Keeping a log can help motivate you to improving on your habits...

Oh. And can I get a pet peeve off my chest? HEY! Unless it's really foggy... DON'T drive around with your foglights on- especially you 4x4s! You're making it very tough for me to see how cool you and your foglights are. But ya know what? If it IS that foggy, it'd probably be safer if you weren't out on the street and just stayed home!

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Amazing tips
Nov 21, 2007 7:59PM PST

Hi,
Thanks for sharing the tips,really it is helpful.Fuel efficiency and recently escalating gasoline prices have forced many to place themselves on a strict budget and/or even getting a gas card, putting the commute expenses that seems to keep on rising and not come down, on credit!Take the time to uncover great savings opportunity, promise and potential, for cars, suv?s, using station type or credit card payment methods to lessen the impact of the rising, escalating costs of gas, fuel, diesel etc.http://www.gaspumptips.com/

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WRX doesn't know anything
Feb 17, 2008 2:38PM PST

many of his tips are way off. Here's a few:

"TIP 4: Constant, Steady Speeds"

google "pulse and glide" to see why that's wrong.

"TIP 6: Don't Modify Your Gas Engine With Go-Fast Parts"

many "go fast parts" also make the car lighter (lighter car = faster car) and a lighter vehicle gets better mpg. Also "go fast parts" are usually more efficient, like upgraded intake, exhaust, etc, and better efficiency = better gas mileage. Of course dropping a V8 in a 4-cylinder car to make it "go fast" wouldn't achieve higher mpg, but many of the same mods that provide more hp allow achieve better mileage.

the rest of the "tips" are common sense, like "don't drive like a street racer". Do we really need a tip that says "don't constantly mash the pedal if you want good gas mileage"?

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Tips for Getting Better Gas Mileage
Mar 11, 2008 7:36AM PDT

Here is a page that I wrote which goes into detail about some of the best tips for saving gas and increasing the gas mileage of your car: http://www.mahalo.com/How_to_Get_Better_Gas_Mileage. Most of these suggestions are relatively easy and don't require a complete change of your lifestyle or driving habits.

As the prices of gas continues to climb, this topic is going to become more and more important!