Hypermilers - Thou shalt not speed | pnj.com | Pensacola News Journal
[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]Hypermilers - Thou shalt not speed[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Serif]Motorists are using questionable tactics to make most of every last drop of fuel
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Rebekah Allen
rallen@pnj.com [/FONT]Pensacola resident John Shelton cruised along in his 1998 Nissan Frontier well under the speed limit on a 55-mph road.
A red Toyota Tundra followed closely behind, flashing his lights, until the two trucks stopped next to each other at a light.
"It's 55 miles per hour, and you're going 35," the driver of the Tundra yelled at Shelton.
"It's a speed limit, not a speed minimum," Shelton responded before the Tundra driver shouted an expletive and drove off.
Shelton, 37, a Navy instructor, is a hypermiler, and controlling speed is the No. 1 rule of a hypermiler.
As gasoline prices continue to soar, a growing number of hypermilers are using eccentric — and perhaps unsafe — driving techniques to increase their gas mileage by 30 percent — sometimes more.
Hypermilers are known to turn off their engines at long stop lights, drive under the speed limit, coast on highways in neutral, time stoplights, drive without air conditioning, overinflate their tires and follow closely behind semi-trucks to reduce drag.
Hypermiling on the gulf
Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Fraser, Jul 16, 2008.