| Secrets to Better Gas Mileage = Return on Investment Program |
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| Considering a new car to save money on gas? Do your homework first! |
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| Want to see how much money you can save by increasing your MPG in your current car? |
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| Want to know how much money could you save if you bought a hybrid or a smaller car? |
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| Do you know which car has the best fuel economy for the price? |
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| You can find out below in 4 easy steps (To make changes ... click the link above if you are on the printable version). |
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| STEP 1 - ENTER YOUR DAILY MILES DRIVEN |
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| Input the number of miles you drive per day in the red box. |
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| Adjust if you think your yearly average is higher (the average is about 15,000 per year for most people. |
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| Miles per day |
40 |
miles per day |
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| Average |
1,187 |
miles per month |
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| Yearly Average |
14,240 |
miles |
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| STEP 2 - ENTER CURRENT FUEL PRICE |
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| Enter the price you pay for fuel (gas or diesel) in the green box. |
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| $4.00 |
per gallon of fuel |
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| STEP 3 - COMPARE MILEAGE COSTS |
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| Find your current vehicle MPG in the chart below. Use your city/highway combined averages. |
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| If you are not sure … you can look up the EPA values at the www.fueleconomy.gov website. |
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| You can use this chart to compare your monthly savings if you drove a more fuel efficient vehicle |
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| or to change your driving habits to save more money by increasing your MPG (a 30%+ improvement is easily possible). |
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| Combined MPG |
15 |
20 |
25 |
30 |
35 |
40 |
45 |
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| Gas used (gal) |
79 |
59 |
47 |
40 |
34 |
30 |
26 |
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| Gas price ($) |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
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| Cost per month |
$316.44 |
$237.33 |
$189.87 |
$158.22 |
$135.62 |
$118.67 |
$105.48 |
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| Combined MPG |
50 |
55 |
60 |
70 |
80 |
90 |
100 |
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| Gas used (gal) |
24 |
22 |
20 |
17 |
15 |
13 |
12 |
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| Gas price ($) |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
$4.00 |
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| Cost per month |
$94.93 |
$86.30 |
$79.11 |
$67.81 |
$59.33 |
$52.74 |
$47.47 |
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| STEP 4 - COMPARE VEHICLES BELOW |
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| Yes hybrids are showing excellent gas mileage numbers; but is their cost premium worth it? |
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| Enter the vehicle name, price and the average combined MPG below. |
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| Does not include misc. costs: insurance, taxes, or maintenance (hybrid battery packs are about $3-$4K by the way) |
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Monthly |
Your Total |
5 Year Cost |
Loan Calculator |
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| Vehicle #1 |
Honda Fit (base) |
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Gas Cost |
Monthly Cost |
Premium |
# Years |
5 |
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| Vehicle #1 Cost |
$13,950.00 |
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# Payments |
60 |
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| Monthly Payment |
$276.23 |
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153.12 |
$429.35 |
baseline |
Loan Amount |
$13,950.00 |
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| Vehicle #1 MPG |
31 |
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Interest Rate |
7.00% |
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Monthly Pymt |
($276.23) |
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| Vehicle #3 |
Pontiac Vibe (base) |
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| Vehicle #3 Cost |
$15,310.00 |
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Enter your loan information |
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| Monthly Payment |
$303.16 |
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163.68 |
$466.84 |
$2,249.39 |
into the calculator to figure |
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| Vehicle #3 MPG |
29 |
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your monthly payment |
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and transfer to the left |
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in the blue boxes. |
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| Vehicle #2 |
Toyota Prius (base) |
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| Vehicle #2 Cost |
$23,375.00 |
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Interest rate national average |
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| Monthly Payment |
$462.85 |
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103.19 |
$566.04 |
$8,201.41 |
is just under 7% currently, but |
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| Vehicle #2 MPG |
46 |
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depends on your credit of course. |
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| In short, buying that new Hybrid is not the best bang for your buck. It is over $8,000 more than the Fit over the loan period. |
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| You can put any 3 cars into this sheet and compare (put the lowest cost as Vehicle #1 and so on). |
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| I'll bet the car dealer didn't tell you that when you went to look at that Hybrid … did they? :) |
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| Saving Money on Gas = Helping to Save the Environment |
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| This program started when I was researching a Toyota Prius. I wanted to do the math to see if it was worth the cost. |
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| I decided that other people might benefit from this as well; while raising awareness for better fuel economy. |
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| I have since learned how to drive even more efficiently and I am averaging almost 38 MPG (30% above EPA #'s for my car). |
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| How was I able to do that? I read up on the Internet about using driving techniques (called "Hypermiling") |
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| Many "hypermiler experts" can achieve 50%-90% increases in MPG!!! |
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| What is "Hypermiling" |
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| It is a phrase that describe a driver who strives to obtain the best possible fuel economy in their vehicle. Most hypermilers |
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| use specific driving techniques to beat the EPA mileage estimates for their vehicles. It is possible to beat the mileage |
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| of the best hybrids with a normal gas powered economy car. Some hypermilers achieve over 100mpg with a hybrid. |
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| Anyone can learn how to hypermile. Although the media has talked about it a lot lately, they often get the facts wrong. |
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| A true hypermiler tries to drive safely and is much more alert and aware than the average driver. There are a number of |
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| free sources on the Internet that describe the driving techniques that you can use to start increasing your fuel economy. |
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| Common Hypermiling (Gas Saving) Techniques |
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| Start keeping a gas mileage log |
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| Use a trip computer to try to better your fuel economy (ScanGauge II) |
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| Join an Internet forum to learn from others (www.ecomodders.com., www.gassavers.org, www.cleanmpg.com, etc.) |
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| Always accelerate slowly from a stop (shift at 2000 RPM if manual transmission) |
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| Always stay at or under the speed limit (55-65 on highway) |
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| Use Pulse and Glide Technique in city and rural roads (gas on to speed limit, then coast down 10mph or so, repeat) |
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| Coast in Neutral as much as possible (time stop lights, etc.) |
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| Speed up going down hills, and coast going up hills (it is much more fuel effecient) |
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| Accelerate at peak torque and low RPM’s (about 60-70% throttle to shift into taller gear) |
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| DWB = Drive without using brakes as much as possible (use bigger following distances … less wasted brake energy) |
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| Turn off engine at long lights (turn key back to on without starting to activate air bag functions) |
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| Use cruise control on flat highway stretches (saves avg. FE of about 7% according to Edmunds.com) |
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| Keep tires properly inflated … some people increase them to max PSI (less rolling resistance) |
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| Keep perfect tire alignment on car (a pulling tire hurts your fuel economy) |
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| Reduce the drag coef. on your car (Aerodynamic changes = grill block, under belly pan, wheel covers, etc.) |
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| Use compressor to keep air cleaner blown clean of dirt (only needed if you have an older car) |
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| Only use AC at speed above 45mph (windows slightly down otherwise) |
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| Always keep engine tuned up |
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| Run light weight Synthetic oil (that is recommended by your manufacturer) |
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| Engine off coast – very controversial technique … not recommended or non-hybrids (but some hybrids do this automatically) |
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| Start using websites like www.GasBuddy.com to find the cheapest gas price near you |
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| Use a gas credit card that gives you a discount for gas purchases |
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| Note: This is just a partial list, as there are many other things you can do to get better fuel economy. |
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| Questions or feedback: email Mark Grove (markjgrove@yahoo.com) |
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