S
Steven Fisher
Any experiences, one way or the other?
Steve
Steve
Have an '05. Great car, dependable, comfortable, consistent 23-24mpg.Any experiences, one way or the other?
Steve
Any experiences, one way or the other?
Steve
No one said:Have an '05. Great car, dependable, comfortable, consistent 23-24mpg.
No one said:Have an '05. Great car, dependable, comfortable, consistent 23-24mpg.
I only have enough data for one calculations so far: 27mpg. Mostly city
driving. I hope that wasn't just a blip.
Steve
Steven said:I only have enough data for one calculations so far: 27mpg. Mostly city
driving. I hope that wasn't just a blip.
Steve
Voyager said:Yes, one computation is a blip by definition. You need to average at
least 5 fill-ups to begin to get a decent MPG value.
Oh, I know, but all I have is two fill-ups, and I doubt I started with a
full car so one value is all that I can do. I'm not about to go out of
my way to burn gas.
I'm sure I could have saved $10,000 or more over the life of my last car
if I'd been watching it more carefully, combining gas and repairs that
fixed secondary damage. Lesson learned. I plan on keeping a proper
record with this car, and even bought an iPhone app to do it.
Steve
Steven said:Oh, I know, but all I have is two fill-ups, and I doubt I started with a
full car so one value is all that I can do. I'm not about to go out of
my way to burn gas.
I'm sure I could have saved $10,000 or more over the life of my last car
if I'd been watching it more carefully, combining gas and repairs that
fixed secondary damage. Lesson learned. I plan on keeping a proper
record with this car, and even bought an iPhone app to do it.
Steve
Mike Marlow said:How do you figure that watching your gas mileage could have saved you
$10,000?
Voyager said:I wasn't suggesting you burn more gas unnecessarily, just that you not
read too much into one MPG check. I keep a log in all of my vehicles
and record every fill-up (and I fill up every time I buy gas) and the
MPG for that tank.
Steven said:When I finally got the real cause of my problems repaired, I realized my
car was about two months old when it last got the kind of mileage I was
getting now. The drop wasn't immediate, but it happened. That means it
was damaged for about eight years. Add in a couple extra repairs that
hinted what the real problem was -- multiple catalytic converters, new
wires a couple times, rebuilding the exhaust system.
8 years of a minor problem can pretty easily add to $10,000. Err, though
I should say I'm thinking Canadian. Call it $7,000, since the exchange
rate has varied so much over the decade.