Even the 2-3 minutes while you scrape off your car on a cold winter morning will make a difference.Poseur said:I'm gonna bet that the computer doesn't take enginebreaking into account, and tha tit simply weighs rpms, perhasp throttle position vs velocity...
One of my good friends is a ford master mechanic, and also a fuel economy miser, and he swears that downshifting and engine breaking will either cutoff or atleast greatly cutdown injectors, and it WILL have a positive effect on your gas mileage. Granted this is only going to be the difference vs whatever idling for the length of time your braking down to speed would take, but multiply that by however many stop and go cycles you have, and it adds up. Hell I'm suprised noone's mentioned turning off your engine at long stoplights, essentially that's the same thing. Again, this is with your car idling, so it's not a HUGE amount of gas, but it will add up. I know for a fact form excessive laziness and remote start use that a car idling for 5-10min every morning will dip heavily into your mileage.
Good scenerio. I remember posting a while ago the cost benifits of a hybrid car. Going from an SUV that gets 10-15mpg to a hybrid is a worth while investment but trading in your Protege or other gasoline compact car that gets 25-35mpg for a hybrid that gets 40-60mpg does not ease your wallet very much. If you buy one to save the environment that's another story.rjmhotrod said:I think the real question is how much money do you have to spend to save money? That's essentially what we're looking at. Let's look at a scenario. I'm going to use averages here, so this isn't highly technical but helpful nonetheless. Lets say you drive 15,000/year and you currently get 26mpg. Let's say you're goal is to get to 30 mpg. In your current situation you buy 576.923 gallons of gas per year (15,000 / 26 = 576.923). At 30 mpg you buy 500 gallons (15,000 / 30 = 500). That's a difference of 76.923 gallons of gas per year by increasing mpg by 4. 76.923 gallons at $1.90 (again just an average) is $146.15. So you're saving $146 a year for gas by going from 26 to 30 mpg. If you keep you're car for 4 years then you save $584.60 over the life of your ownership of the car. That's a good amount. However how much do you have to spend on mods to get to that amount. Things I've read so far in this thread include CAI, exhaust, irridium plugs, performance air filters, narrower wheels and tires, higher grade gas, new brake pads, and 4 years of air fresheners (from driving around without A/C on). Granted there were some inexpensive things such as air pressures and driving styles and so forth. My point here is that mods aren't bad but do the math and make sure that you don't spend more on mods than what you will get in return in fuel savings (if fuel savings is your ultimate goal).