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[Closed] How many MPG does you car do?

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It doen't matter, it's the gallons you use per year that matter.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 6:40 pm
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Approx 1333 in my case then Edukator


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 6:42 pm
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1333 gallons! Sheeesh!


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 6:46 pm
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Focus 1.8tdci about 45mpg on average
Berlingo 1.6 hdi about 55mpg on average
Aprilia Mille Rsvr 1000 about 20 on average (but its money well spent :lol:)


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:04 pm
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About 9 mpg... Ooops


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:04 pm
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civic type r does about 30mpg
audi s3 does about 24mpg
caterham 7 does about 10mpg on track, maybe 25 off it.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:09 pm
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2001 VW T4 2.5tdi 36 mpg

1998 Nissan Almera 1.6 petrol 33 mpg


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:11 pm
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VW Passat saloon 2.0 TDI Auto 2006 - 52-55 summer 48-52 winter
Toyota Prius 2006 - 60-62 summer, 54-57 winter

I drive at the speed limit all the time and do a lot of motorway, but I know how to maximise mpg without going slowly.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:12 pm
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TVW T5 174 mapped to 220 inc dpf filter removal 35 ish mpg
Smart for two 55 mpg
ZZR 1100 dont know, its too much fun. 225 miles per tank touring... down to 120 per tank at a steady 150mph.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:27 pm
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Wunundred! 😀

It does not in any way really.

I don't even have a car. 😳

I can't even drive....


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:29 pm
 br
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Definately think this post ought to be x-ref against the 'becoming your dad' post, but at least I now know why most queue's of traffic have a car at the front ambling along at 40mph, its a STWer.

BMW 535i
Motorway 25mpg as long as kept below 100, and 20ish around town.
Triumph 1050
53mpg, no matter how hard its ridden

But tbh on trips to my folks driving at the rate the fuel-misers do would cost me an additional meal - 370 miles would take all day 😕


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:33 pm
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Edukator - Member

1333 gallons! Sheeesh!

Yup, out of my own pocket (well, my business anyway).


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:50 pm
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Sitting at 30-34 mpg for a subaru impreza 2.0 petrol (non turbo) whether loaded with kit/bikes or just myself....got a spreadsheet with all the fuel i've used since i got the car around 3 years ago (how sad I am I!!)

Around 40 average for 1.5 lsi Honda civic before the impreza

This little graph may be of interest to people as well as made it to see how much I could potentially save per month on fuel based on avrage monthly mileage over the last 12 months.

[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:53 pm
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Freelander 2 2.2 td4 - 35 mpg
Mini Cooper S - 32 mpg
Westfield Cosworth - 15 mpg


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:53 pm
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Re the Ampera/Volt tests, it's not exactly greenwash because they do the same test as other cars, but it's not representative. Of course GM aren't in a hurry to rectify that...

There's been some movement in the US to create a new test for these kinds of cars. If you only do trips of less than 40 miles you'll get unlimited miles per gallon of petrol...

but if you drive it further than ~ 40 miles without a recharge it is worse than a standard diesel.

Sure about that? Citation?


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:56 pm
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Of course the question is: why the chuff do we measure mpg when we sell petrol in litres?

Is to makes people thinks they get more for their money.

The Yerpeans use metric cos it sounds like more:

[i]Ah oui mamselle; c'est fifteen centimetres; c'est magnifique, non?[/i]

Sounds more impressive than [i]un demi-pied[/i], does not in any way it? 😐

Dirty cheating...


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 7:57 pm
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I assume you mean 16-18 miles per gallon. Of oil.

Only half a litre in the first 6 weeks/1500 miles. Being gentle with it...


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:04 pm
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I get approx 36 mph out of my T reg 1.8 16V Laguna. Seems OK to me given the age of the car, and the fact that I mainly drive 15 miles each way to work each day.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:04 pm
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about 65 combined iirc and more on Mway and £30 tax.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:06 pm
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Oh and all those quoting high mpg figures at a constant 60mph - pah. My car would do 70-80mpg at 60mph if I could be bothered to drive it that slowly on the motorway!


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:10 pm
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Pug partner 1.9 43mpg
1.4 golf 41mpg
2.5 td land rover 90 28 mpg ( post service .... Pre it was 19 )


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:11 pm
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28 mpg ( post service .... Pre it was 19 )

Holy cow.. did they tell you what they did?


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:16 pm
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Not really sure... 45mpg seems to be about right, for allround driving, I've got a bit of a heavy foot but that's balanced out by the fact that it's a bit feeble. Focus 1.8TD.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:16 pm
 mboy
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X Reg Audi A4 Quattro 2.5 V6 TDi does between 36-38mpg on average (42-44 according to the wildly inaccurate computer), below 30mpg if thrashed and more than 40mpg on a run.

Most surprised so far by WCA's 6 litre Merc averaging 22.3mpg! I'm sure the computer is lying. More like 16-18mpg I'd bet, unless he drives it like his Grandad, which I can bet he doesn't!


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:20 pm
 thv3
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Honda Civic 2.2CDTI - 55mpg combined, real world figures, commuting on A type roads with a bit or city driving too. I'm sure I could do better, but can't be bothered tbh.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 8:27 pm
 br
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[i]Most surprised so far by WCA's 6 litre Merc averaging 22.3mpg! I'm sure the computer is lying. More like 16-18mpg I'd bet, unless he drives it like his Grandad, which I can bet he doesn't! [/i]

If its anything like my 535i, he could probably spend all day keeping up with traffic and the engine is just ticking-over - especially with autos.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 9:05 pm
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busy commute, lots of stop start, often longish weekend drives, bike racks live on roof, rarely boot it and only occasionally go over 75 on MWay. Over the 32K miles from new the trip computes says 42.1 mpg.

BMW 318d tourer, efficient dynamics, stop start etc etc.

IMO it really is all down to the type of driving, rather than the way the car is driven or what it can do in a test simulation

Oh, and the wife's 1.8 petrol Cmax does 28 mpg on average, all short journeys, school run, 5 mile work commuete on busy roads.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 9:16 pm
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'92 Lexus LS400 21mpg commuting, 30mpg motorway
'98 Audi A4 2.4 30V V6 Petrol 33mpg
'53 Audi A6 2.5 TDi 37mpg
'60 Skoda Octavia vRS 2.0 TDi 51mpg
'02 Partner Quicksilver 1.4 petrol 40mpg
'58 Yamaha Tenere 58mpg
'94 Triumph Speed Triple 45mpg.
Granted the last two might not be much use, and I haven't mentioned my '75 Chevy Nova with a 350bhp SBC that did 7mpg.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 9:26 pm
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Amazed by all the 'eco' models of car being thrashed along, the regular versions would probably be more efficient being hammered as they wouldn't be under the same strain to maintain outside lane progress.

Got an 04 Mondeo 130 TDCi, 180k miles, thrashed hard, we live in the Welsh hills, take the short-cuts over the mountain roads, I am quite impatient, all police car locations memorised - and still it rarely goes below 50mpg (measured). Could be amazing if driven miserly, or even just within the rules more often.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:10 pm
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Amazed by all the 'eco' models of car being thrashed along, the regular versions would probably be more efficient being hammered as they wouldn't be under the same strain to maintain outside lane progress

a) no
b) people often buy the eco cars sown South so they don't have to pay the London congestion charge.
c) you might drive economically most of the time but be in a hurry that particular day.

IMO it really is all down to the type of driving, rather than the way the car is driven or what it can do in a test simulation

No, it's down to the car AND how it's driven. Some cars are more sensitive than others to driving style or technique.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:13 pm
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E91 325D Touring.. 3 litre diesel.. ~43 MPG


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:14 pm
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Stage 1 250bhp golf Gti - 28mpg round town, 35mpg motorway, 40mpg country lane 50mph traffic

Mini cooper diesel - 53mpg round town, 64mpg motorway, 78mpg country lane 50mph traffic


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:23 pm
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2001 Vectra 2.0 Diesel (Low tune model), 43mpg Ragged to hell with bikes on the roof and tons of luggage. 48-53mpg 30/70 urban/motorway driving. Usually cruise between 75-80 mph. Fast driving style but sympathetic to economy, (light on the brakes).


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:28 pm
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who cares

why do you care about this

have a word with yourself look what you have become


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:34 pm
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I did it my self molgrips

Fuel and air filters didnt look like they had been changed for 40k surprised it ran at all really

Oil change in engine , gear box and diffs were all pretty good though.

Changed glow plugs and the Boost diaphragm as well ( the latter which will be what gave it the mpg boost as it was torn)


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 10:45 pm
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Molgrips you sound like swiss tony!

Achieving the perfect mpg is rather like making love to a beautiful woman etc 😀

Don't know whether to be impressed or saddened by the levels of geekery with all these mpgs being rolled off the tongue... do you all keep spreadsheets or something?


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 11:38 pm
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1991 Toyota Celica GT4, 15mpg driven quietly.

Probably 5 mpg driven enthusiastically.

Although it does have just over 400 bhp and a whopping great big garret turbo on it 😀


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 11:41 pm
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I have no idea, I never have done, it's simply not important. It's my car, I have to drive it, I'll try and get a more economical one next time, whenever that is. Can't be doing with this sort of detail in life.


 
Posted : 20/10/2011 11:45 pm
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Bugatti Veyron, 4.57mpg - though it does a bit better if I stick to the speed limits.


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 12:01 am
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Honda Accord CDTi. 50mpg most of the time. A bit less if I skin it.

My wife has an AUDI A3 Tdi. That's better on mpg if it's driven slowly (like she does), probably about 55mpg. It's a lot worse if I drive it because I nail it everywhere. It's like a smokey go-kart. Lots of fun, goes round roundabouts really quickly and will leave proper sports cars while it's in the turbo zone.


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 12:23 am
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Wozza - Member
E46 330d Tourer, give it some and it'll do 40mpg-ish combined, drive it sensibly on the motorway and it'll do 56.8mpg average at 73mph.

Bollox! BMW themselves only claim 44.8mpg (auto) and 48mpg(man) for extra urban. Even hypermilers struggle to get those figures from a 330d.


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 7:57 am
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My Mondeo ST TDCI very rarely dropped below 50mpg in the 18 months (and 35k miles) I owned it.

My Octy vRS I have now though, with bikes on the roof hammering up to Scotland etc....... I'd rather not look.


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 8:16 am
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Of course the question is: why the chuff do we measure mpg when we sell petrol in litres?

Is to makes people thinks they get more for their money.

True. If you calculate Miles Per Litre, it's often very depressing.


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 8:43 am
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Old school Focus 1.8 oil burning stove seems to do 50mpg per tank for a mixture of drives up the motorway to Lakes and a few local trips round town. I drive at somewhere between 70 and 80 on the motorway unless I am being a **** and it creeps up to 90+

My old RGV250 does 26 mpg and drinks a bottle of £14 a litre fully synthetic two stroke oil on top every 6 tank fulls. But it needs warming up and then gets mercilessly thrashed down the lanes and is only geared for 99mph revving out in 6th.

My XBR650 special gets over 55mpg normally and if you tickle it along for a gentle cruise this creeps up to 65-70mpg.

Previous cars did the following
Mondeo 20 tddi 43mpg best ever but normally just 40 if you weren't trying.
Pug 806 2.0 HDi 38 mpg best ever and more like 35
Primera 2.0 petrol 34mpg
Pug 405 1.9td 45 mpg
Escort 1.8td 45mpg


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 9:18 am
 ski
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randomjeremy - Member

who cares

why do you care about this

have a word with yourself look what you have become

you could also ask yourself why you bothered to post the above on a post that is clearly about mpg?

😉


 
Posted : 21/10/2011 9:20 am
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