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[Closed] Spinoff from how much to fill up, Whats your MPG

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66 plate 1.2TSI Polo .. on a stop start 17 mile each way commute with aircon always on, and frequent short journeys whilst in work it averages around 48mpg.

Motorway miles easy 55mpg id guess


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 7:48 pm
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Amazingly our Ovlov V70 (diesel) and Seat Ibiza estate (petrol) both show 44mpg over thousands of mixed miles.
In reality the SEAT is typical VAG and lies, it's actually about 38mpg when I calculated a couple of tanks.
The Volvo is about spot on in reality.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 7:56 pm
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35 in ’06 A4 2.0t (BUL version 220bhp) but the 70 litre tank means only filling up once every 2 months

That's slightly better than my one, it averages around 33-34, how may miles does yours do to a litre of oil?


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 8:34 pm
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Yeah it truly is impressive, and I hardly use the Eco mode. The last 3l I had, diesel Audi A6 Quattro did similar MPG with much less power or more importantly fun....


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 8:36 pm
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25mpg for the m4
33mpg for the diesel kuga
20mpg for the caterham
4mpg for the diesel boat


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 9:06 pm
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Local eco weather people would like us driving diesels as less CO2, so feel the current emphasis away from them is not helping!

Whole family here, three generations in a wide range of fuel burners:

Golf tdi 52mpg
Polo tdi 58mpg
Civic 40mpg pet
Rav 4 38mpg Pet
Vito LWB 38mpg
L200 Pickup 26mpg
Dellow 24mpg Pet
Racers: all on track (All running 97 or 110 Ron)
Pug 106 S1 20mpg
1960s F3 car 12mpg
TM530 Supermoto 12mpg
Honda CR250 10mpg
OMS Hillclimb car 8mpg
(As a comparison, told an F1 is 6mpg and a Dakar Pajero 2mpg and an old Blower Bentley around 10mpg) we did own a Clio diesel that frequently did 70mpg plus on runs)


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 9:29 pm
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Octavia vrs TFSI 36 mpg
E36 M3 27 mpg

Both like 98 or 99 ron unfortunately!


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 9:57 pm
 diz
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Seat Cupra 300 manual. Has averaged 40.5 mpg over 17,000 miles of mixed driving. Only every put 99 Ron in it. Fantastic little car, so I've ordered another one.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:00 pm
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Ford Ranger he gets 22 mpg

We had a 2013plate for the farm over two years,  and it was rubbish on more than just the mpg figures. Glad to get shot of the heap.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:04 pm
 TedC
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2005 Mondeo - hovers between 30 and 31mpg according to the trip computer. Possibly nearer 35mpg on a long motorway trip, offset by 25mpg around town. Not too bad for 3.0l v6.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:10 pm
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  "1960s F3 car 12mpg"

Wait up...I want this guys life....just right for the Tesco's run.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:22 pm
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2000 vintage Saab 9-3 Turbo does 31/32 going backwards and forwards to work. It's a bit more on a run but I never check it. A tank does around 400 miles commuting as long as I wear slippers. If I get a bit keen you can almost hear polar bears dying out.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:24 pm
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Happybiker ..lots of Horsepower ..but the trade-off is that you are driving a car that is ugly as ****..
And if you cant have fun in a 3.0lV6..you're doing something wrong ..😁


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:28 pm
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I once saw 33mpg from my C63 between Heathrow and Lincoln but normally I get about mid 20s in race mode I can get it down to single figures.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:30 pm
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Volvo V60. Between 55 and 65 depending on wind / temperature. Usually trundling between North Yorkshire and Heathrow at about 75mph.


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:34 pm
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Avg 31 in Transit Custom DCIV 170 auto , 33 in T5 140 2.0 DSG

Chopped the transit in for a wildtrack yesterday and picking it up on Tuesday .
Hoping to get a bit more than 22 as mentioned somewhere above.
I have found that giving the transit some beans gets a better return than driving miss daisy (on a run anyway)


 
Posted : 22/01/2020 10:43 pm
 rone
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4 miles per kWh. Kia Soul Ev
40 mpg karoq 1l DSG


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 7:50 am
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Ford Ranger he gets 22 mpg

We had a 2013plate for the farm over two years, and it was rubbish on more than just the mpg figures. Glad to get shot of the heap.

Maybe that's why the drivers always seem so irrate. They should be renamed the Ford Anger.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 7:59 am
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Happybiker ..lots of Horsepower ..but the trade-off is that you are driving a car that is ugly as ****..
And if you cant have fun in a 3.0lV6..you’re doing something wrong ..😁

Maybe ugly, but it looks fine from the inside. 3.0l V6 diesel would be more entertaining without AWD, and being in a 1.8t car.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 11:12 am
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Yet in dynamic mode and sport setting I've had as much "fun" as any other car Ive owned / driven ..😉


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 11:42 am
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Van 32mpg
V8 575bhp MLLC on a good day 12mpg


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 11:52 am
 rsl1
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That’s slightly better than my one, it averages around 33-34, how may miles does yours do to a litre of oil?

... yes

(Also I once got 55mpg driving from the fox house down to centre of Sheffield)


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 11:53 am
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TedC

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Not too bad for 3.0l v6.

until you remember the power that V6 is(n't) putting out. Was very smooth though


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 11:59 am
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41-44mpg on my Citroen 1.2 Puretech. Goes like the clappers too.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 12:38 pm
 TedC
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TedC

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Not too bad for 3.0l v6.

until you remember the power that V6 is(n’t) putting out. Was very smooth though

Never noticed being power/performance deprived. Ok, it’s not the quickest car out there, but it’s quicker than most and a bit of a sleeper (Black Ghia X, currently running winter steelies so looks like any other humdrum Mondeo).

Will be going soon (along with it fancy RS alloys) as shiny company car due mid-March.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 1:01 pm
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T6 DSG, long runs only 40-45mpg. Head winds are the killer.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 1:33 pm
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2006 Focus Diesel, used to get 80mpg on the odd 6th-gear-at-50mph hypermiling exercise. 50mpg more normally.

2010 Passat diesel, about 50mpg (me driving - slowly) or about 40mpg (wife driving, lead foot).

'03 CRV - petrol - 30mpg (ish). it is shaped like a brick with some extra bits sticking out to get in the way of the airflow. I'm saving the planet by not buying a newer car.

2005 Mondeo – hovers between 30 and 31mpg according to the trip computer. Possibly nearer 35mpg on a long motorway trip, offset by 25mpg around town. Not too bad for 3.0l v6.

Had similar from a Pug 406 V6. It too looked less exciting than the average taxi, with no visual indication it had anything other than a 1.6 oil burner under the bonnet.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 1:57 pm
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Octavia VRS Petrol DSG - ~35 mpg

Seems to have dropped a couple of mpg since a had to have a new engine fitted 🙁


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 2:13 pm
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Octavia Estate, 1.5 SE Tech, boring dad car but will happily switch itself to "2-cylinder mode" at 80mph on a motorway and pootle along doing 70+mpg. Which is nice.

Tends to average about 55mpg on each tank, mixed urban / motorway use (we don't commute in it so the only short journey it does it to the supermarket once every week or two). It's actually a really lovely car, and cavernous with the seats down.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 4:57 pm
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Works Hi-lux limited to 70mph is claiming 32.2mpg.
2005 D5 V70 claiming 42mpg probably from new, I've never reset it in the 6 years we've had it.
When I was using it for work it was 46mpg according to trip computer.
Hook the caravan on to Volvo and it'll do somewhere in the low 30's mpg, whereas there's no difference with the Hi-lux when towing!
We have a 1.2 Polo as well but have no clue as to the mpg!


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 5:04 pm
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Stepwagon - about 26mpg

eGolf - about 3m/kWh (more in summer), so at 5p/kWh charging it's like a 350mpg petrol car at today's average petrol price.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 6:00 pm
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Motorway cruiser: 60
Car for general use: 45
Moderately spirited B road driving about 25

All from a chipped smart Roadster

EDIT just read some posts...WTF...how inefficient are your cars/status wagons?


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 6:31 pm
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Very roughly 35mpg for my Vivaro, mix of long M-way journeys and shorter runs.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 6:45 pm
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so at 5p/kWh charging it’s like a 350mpg petrol

IS that on a night meter / economy 7 ? Has to be shirley, my electric is 16p/kwh. That is mighty impressive if it is. A guy in my road club works for a green energy co and they have run a Tesla as a company car for years. Its on 300,000km's or so and the battery is only showing a 7% deg , which is truely amazing . The motors will probably go before the batterang i reckon


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 8:33 pm
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2018 S3 has averaged 34mpg from new, always driven pretty hard

2019 130bhp partner van showing 48mpg from new. Again driven pretty hard as it doesn’t have a lot of power

When doing motorway speeds the van is low 40’s and the S3 sits around the same. Van will do 60mpg doing 50mph On country lanes but rarely happens


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 10:07 pm
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Work Ford Connect LWB 1.5td?, 2019. 45-55 mpg depending on journey.

My Porsche 951 3.0t 1986. I think 17mpg, don't monitor it too closely. Currently has a thirst for starter motors.

GFs Vauxhall Astra estate 1.6 8v 2004, 35ish mpg I think.
I'm just happy when it's working properly, it's probably the most pampered old Astra in the world. So much as a squeek from it and I lose riding time sorting the squeek out or she won't drive it. Same goes for any MOT advisory.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 10:32 pm
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I use the fuelly app to track mine.
So this is an actual figure based on what I put in each time I fill up.
Over 3200 miles I’m averaging 46.8 mpg.
Mini Clubman Cooper SD auto.


 
Posted : 23/01/2020 10:59 pm
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Does anyone actually think their trip computer is accurate? It isn’t.
My last diesel Ford trip computer was 5mpg optimistic in the 4 years I kept records for fuel usage, slightly less in the Vauxhall’s before it.
Current work car is a 1.8l hybrid and does around 50mpg, more in summer less in winter and varies a lot more than a diesel.
Wife’s car does 18mpg. On super unleaded. Yikes.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 1:00 am
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I've for an m135i, 3ltr 320bhp.

It's brilliant, does 40mpg on the motorway because it's 8 speed, but also does some fine local trips at 18mpg. Fortunately I live in London and it sits there 95% of the time.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 1:03 am
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IS that on a night meter / economy 7 ? Has to be shirley, my electric is 16p/kwh.

Yep, Octopus energy (who I use) and a few others now do time of day tariffs if you have a smart meter. Usually set day rate with a cheap nighttime window a bit like Economy 7 used to be. Octopus also do one that tracks wholesale prices every half hour so it’s more expensive at peak time (4-7pm) but much cheaper outside of that.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 1:10 am
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Works pickup - 28/29ish usually, sometimes I can coax it into the low 30s over a tank if I am being particularly careful.

13 year old, 110k mile RAV4 - 41 if being used on school runs, 50ish mpg on a long run.

Bike... 31mpg usually... had it down to 19 on the Dumfries run once!


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 1:11 am
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Honda Jaaaaaaazz. 2018, 1.3.
80 miles a day, mixed urban, A roads and motorway. Bikes, camping stuff and grandkids at the weekend.
Always between 50 and 55 mpg.

For a simple, normally aspirated petrol engine with bugger all torque I'm quite impressed.

It's built well, but lightness has been prioritised over noise insulation.
Very sensitive to tyre pressure, the headlights are like two glow works shagging behind a stained glass window and the clutch is vaguer than a Tory manifesto.

I do like it though, fun to thrash, excellent ride, grip and comfort, Tardis like and a nice place to spend 2 or 3 hours a day.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 1:16 am
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Caravelle: 25
KTM: 65
Quadrifolgio: 21 generally. It will do 38 on a run. If I’m nice.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 4:18 am
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Mondeo 43mpg
Berlingo 44.8mpg
Gti 180 24mpg

What I've learnt is that ford's book figure for my car is a lie. The berlingo needs a 6th gear and the 180 doesn't do bad considering it gets ragged.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 6:11 am
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Does anyone actually think their trip computer is accurate?

I've been surprised. I assumed mine would be overstating, but it's been pretty accurate whenever I check. If anything it's more often slightly lower than the actual I calculate (Toyota Auris 1.6 diesel)

I've been around 41-42 mpg per tank recently now it's winter (have had bike carriers fitted a fair bit too)
Was generally 50-51mpg a tank earlier in the year.


 
Posted : 24/01/2020 9:12 am
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