Just clocked a whopping 18MPG on a tank in city driving.... never really imagined this thing would get such bad gas mileage. Good thing I really like it but my god it's basically on par with a lot of large trucks. I can't possibly drive any lighter or do anything to improve the MPG either. Ouch
X2
@N7turbo. There are no silver bullets. Do this one simple thing and poof better FE. Rather an accumulation of small changes in behavior.
I get 2 to 3 MPG better than my wife. She doesn't have a lead foot either.
I call it conscious driving. It's not that important to her to get better FE. She is enjoying the music or conversation. I'm looking way down the road and see the light change and coast to the light and many other simple things. I've been doing it so long, now it's a habit.
At the lights, I'll put the trans in neutral. Not a legal maneuver. My digital dash on my truck shows the engine load drops from 14% to 3% when stopped, in gear vs. out of gear.
Tire pressure and alignment will eat into FE big time too. I just had 4 new tires mounted on the CX 5. When I got home, not 1 tire pressure matched the others. Some over inflated, others under inflated. I have a digital tire pressure gauge to check the tires. When there is a big drop in temp, I check the pressures and add air. Waiting for the idiot light is too late. Tire life suffers as well as FE.
I'll throw in tire balance as well. Like under pressure, this will eat into FE. Even worn suspension hurts FE. We upgraded our coilovers, sway bars, bushings and wheels the first 1000 miles. The car is tight, no slop or wiggle. It tracks like it's on rails. We drive it down the highway with 2 fingers on the wheel.
All the sensors on the car have to be in good working order. As the sensors age, they loose calibration and send inaccurate info to the ECU. The ECU trims the fuel and timing based on this info. On my 19 year old, 275K mile truck it's sensors have with less than 50K on them. I saw a 2 MPG increase in FE when changing to new engine management sensors.
Are your brake dragging? I've chased this issue before. With an infrared gun, shoot each dish after a soft stop.
In the end, to get good FE, everything on the car needs to be like new or better. It could be an accumulation of items.
Are you willing to make any simple, inexpensive mods to your car? And/or get it tuned? This is the first car I rushed to get all my FE mods in place the first 1000 miles. We're glad we did it and now we just drive it. These will pay for themselves many times over over the life of the car.
I notice a bump in FE with Stabil fuel additive. The car just plane runs better with this stuff and is more FE.
In city driving could be creeping along and stopping every block vs little to no traffic on an inner city 4 lane. We are about almost two tanks average intown and short trips, less than 40 miles on the interstate. My wife drives the car about 75% of the time. Our LOM is near 25.5 MPG. Many of our trips, the car never gets fully warmed up and FE suffers. We use the gas burner for short trips and try not to start the diesel unless it's a long enough trip to get it warmed up, this take up to 40 miles...
Try a 100 mile or more interstate drive. Stay 5 MPH under the speed limit in the right lane and if you have to, plan passes way in advance. Pass down hills and so forth. Conscious driving becomes a game for me. On another forum us FE nerds exchange mods and driving technics that apply to our CX 5s. You are right, my old technology, 4 spd auto, 2500, diesel pickup gets 18 in town and 22 to 23 highway with up to 4000 pounds in the bed. Hand calculated.
If your ride is not in the high 20 to low 30s on the above trip, it's time to start looking at some things.
The LOM on these cars is pretty accurate. I check it with hand calculations and it's within 1 MPG range most of the time. Have you checked your LOM vs hand calculated?