26.5 MPG in winter, which nets about 10-12% lower fuel economy from weaker winter fuel blends and the reality that the first 10-minutes are incredibly sloppy and inefficient in winter. The whole of the combustion and friction issues are not resolved until 15 minutes in.
If you average short drives of <15 minutes, the entire drive is done in a sub-optimal condition for fuel efficiency. If you drive 30 minutes, half the drive was done in sub-optimal conditions. If it is extra cold, your tires were contributing that much more to the overall problem.
Fuel efficiency must be compared locally. Even the fuel blends in one area or elevation, and in a given season, can be vastly different than someone 200 miles away. And if you compare your MPG, which results from your 10-15 minute drives, to someone who has a 40-minute commute, well, good luck with that, for reasons stated above.
Fuel economy is about momentum. Leave gaps, look ahead and climb grades with momentum, understand that load (where power is applied but little acceleration is realized) hides a lot of your bad technique. Tire pressure is hugely important, and when it drops with cold waves, that's a hit to your MPG unless you're on top of it regularly.
If you're constantly moving, see acceleration when asking for it, and not using the brakes, as you roll on properly inflated tires, the only thing left is to pray for warm weather, and find out when the summer fuel blends are due at your local stations' pumps.
If you average short drives of <15 minutes, the entire drive is done in a sub-optimal condition for fuel efficiency. If you drive 30 minutes, half the drive was done in sub-optimal conditions. If it is extra cold, your tires were contributing that much more to the overall problem.
Fuel efficiency must be compared locally. Even the fuel blends in one area or elevation, and in a given season, can be vastly different than someone 200 miles away. And if you compare your MPG, which results from your 10-15 minute drives, to someone who has a 40-minute commute, well, good luck with that, for reasons stated above.
Fuel economy is about momentum. Leave gaps, look ahead and climb grades with momentum, understand that load (where power is applied but little acceleration is realized) hides a lot of your bad technique. Tire pressure is hugely important, and when it drops with cold waves, that's a hit to your MPG unless you're on top of it regularly.
If you're constantly moving, see acceleration when asking for it, and not using the brakes, as you roll on properly inflated tires, the only thing left is to pray for warm weather, and find out when the summer fuel blends are due at your local stations' pumps.
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