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dramatic difference in gas mileage on a trip

Discussion in 'Prius c Fuel Economy' started by priustexasbob, Dec 26, 2015.

  1. priustexasbob

    priustexasbob Member

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    I drove to visit relatives over the holiday (185 miles each way) temperatures 65°-70°F
    on the drive there, I drove 65-70 mph during the daylight (no drl or a/c) and calculated 46 mpg
    on the return trip, I drove 75 mph during the evening/night (headlights on no a/c) and calculated 41 mpg.
    41 mpg is gawd awful, but then if I think about it, driving 75 mph and still get 41 mpg it isn't all that bad for such a tiny motor.

    when I say calculated I took the miles driven divided by the fuel used not the Prius computer calculated mpg
     
  2. S Keith

    S Keith Senior Member

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    Slight elevation change?

    Colder on the drive home?

    Fuel bladder makes it difficult to accurately calculate MPG based on fill-up?

    Fuel pump fill-up variation?
     
  3. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    Wet road one way?

    Different breeze conditions?

    No bladder on that car, but do check the elevation difference. It doesn't take much change to show up in Prius mpg results.

    OTOH, a 6 to 7 mph speed difference could be enough to explain the entire mpg difference.
     
    #3 fuzzy1, Dec 27, 2015
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2015
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  4. S Keith

    S Keith Senior Member

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    Fuzzy1, thanks for the clarification.

    I just noticed the first trip was 65-70 and the return was 75. Having ONLY a 5mpg drop is fantastic. I would say the change in speed is almost entirely the cause. The aerodynamic drag increase alone at 75mph vs. 67.5mph is 23.5%.
     
  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Speed difference, plus possibly a slight grade difference, wind direction? Mostly speed.
     
  6. priustexasbob

    priustexasbob Member

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    my home city is elevation 338, destination is 657. there was a negligible wind from the side. Thanks S Keith. there were brief spots where I hit 80 on the toll highway. I am writing it off as speed difference. I'd like to run 60-65 but on I35 I'd get run over. There is always the other toll road (parallels I35) which is 85 and few people drive on it but going 60-65 where people could be doing 90 might not be wise. LOL
     
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  7. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    There's something wrong when you get run over for abiding by speed limits. :(

    I'm not sure it's that black-and-white, I'd hope not.
     
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  8. Sean Nelson

    Sean Nelson Active Member

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    Just find a slow truck and follow it. Added bonus: nobody will cut you off to get in behind the slow truck.
     
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  9. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Another factor can be the gasoline energy content which can vary about 7% MPG (assuming E10), if you filled up. You did not tell us if you filled up, but Houston is reformulated gasoline (lower energy). Most of Texas is not reformulated gasoline, so that means greater chance of variations. Whereas those of us in reformulated gasoline areas can be assured of pretty much constant energy content even between octane grades.
     
  10. fotomoto

    fotomoto Senior Member

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    Depending on the dates of the two trips, a dramatic cold front passed through Texas. I've had a 40 degree swing in temps before/after Christmas.
     
  11. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    Based on my rule of thumb for fuel consumption vs elevation change, I figure the descending leg would get 0.7 mpg higher than the climbing leg. So that doesn't account for what you saw.
    I'll agree that this is the best answer so far.
     
  12. priustexasbob

    priustexasbob Member

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    I'll write if off as speed, next time I go I will hold it at a steady 70mph and see what the mileage is
     
  13. Mo G

    Mo G Member

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    Having done multiple trips(10+) between Houston to Dallas, (~250 +/- 15 miles), Speed is the biggest factor. I have driven at 65 all the way, added about 30 minutes to the drive (total drive time 3 hours 55 minutes), and attained 42 MPG(Calculated manually at the pump). (A/C on the entire time in the texas heat, temp: 95+) Driving same day back at 75 MPH+, MPG dropped down to 37 saved me time(Drive time 3 Hours 22 Minutes), which was more valuable to me than the fuel savings. Driving slower I had 4 bars of gas on the gauge when I got there, I had 2 bars lefts when speeding. Lets do the math:

    Trip 1(65MPH): 250 miles / 42MPG = 5.9523 Gallons used. Drive time 250 Miles / 65 MPH ~3 Hours 55 Minutes
    Trip2(75MPH+): 250 miles/ 37MPG = 6.7567 Gallons used. Drive time 250 Miles / 75 MPH ~3 Hours 22 Minutes

    Difference in Fuel used 6.7567 - 5.9523 = 0.8044 More Gallons Used
    Cost: 0.8044 x $2(National average 1/7/2016)= Spent $1.6088 More.(Values will be different depending on your local gas prices, Gas during last summer was higher, national average was $2.780 Actual cost was higher for me)
    Time Saved: ~30 minutes
    I believe saving that time is worth more than $1.6088 for me.

    Applied to your scenario:

    Trip 1(65-70MPG): 185Miles / 46MPG = 4.0217 Gallons used. Drive time 185miles/ 67MPH ~2 hours 45 minutes
    Trip 2(75MPH): 185Miles / 41MPG = 4.5121 Gallons used. Drive time 185Miles / 75MPH ~ 2 Hours 28 Minutes

    Difference in Fuel used, 4.5121 - 4.0217 = 0.4904 more Gallons used,
    Cost: 0.4904 x $2 (National average 1/7/2016 )= Spent $0.9808 More (Values will be different depending on your local gas prices)
    Time saved: ~17 minutes.
    Do you believe this is worth the cost of extra time saved of getting back home?


    You are correct, for speeding, 75+ MPH, our fuel efficiency isn't bad, for the motor.
     
  14. InPriusLove

    InPriusLove Member

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    Use cruise control and keep speed consistent and you automatically gain 10 mpg.
     
  15. priustexasbob

    priustexasbob Member

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    thanks for the detailed message. as for saving time vs fuel if I am not pressed for time then I might see what fuel mileage I can get, but just a nominal increase in fuel cost isn't worth it as per your calculations show.
     
  16. Mo G

    Mo G Member

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    As stated above, cruise control will add to your fuel efficiency.

    You are correct again, that for the nominal value of fuel cost, it's not worth being worried about speed vs MPG.

    If I take a trip greater than 150 miles, I will speed and save time. 10-15 MPH faster will save about 20-30 minutes over a 2 hour time frame. I'd rather be at the weekend getaway sooner than later. If your not pressed for time, and want to enjoy the drive, cruise control/ consistent speed is your best friend.

    Either way, we get some of the best fuel economy on the road.
     
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