Life as I Know It; Family; Lifestyle; and Healthy Living!
How to save.....
Published on August 15, 2005 By foreverserenity In Current Events
I received some conservation tips from terpfan in a response to my "A Gassy Issue" blog (the first one). I happened to be browsing the About.com Website and found the following tips as well and thought they might be helpful.

1.Don't drive a gas guzzler. Do you really need that SUV? Six cylinders instead of four? How about that big pickup truck?
2.Keep your car properly maintained and tuned. A poorly tuned car can use more than 25% more gas.
3.Use steel-belted radial tires. They increase gas mileage up to 10%.
4.Don't use high octane gas unless your car is pinging and knocking or you have a high-performance engine and the manufacturer recommends premium gas.
5.Check your tire pressure weekly. For every pound of underinflation, you can lose up to six percent in gas mileage, so if your tires are five pounds underinflated, you'll use up to 30% more gas.
6.Don't top off your tank when pumping gas. On a warm day, gasoline expands and can overflow.
7.Don't warm your car up by letting it idle. The engine warms up faster when driving than it does when idling, and idling wastes about a quart of gas every 15 minutes.
8.Save fuel by combining errands into one trip and avoid backtracking whenever possible.


Wasteful driving habits can double your fuel consumption. Develop gas-saving habits, such as:

1.Always accelerate gently.
2.Watch traffic ahead of you so you can anticipate slow-downs and avoid stops.
3.Coast up to traffic jams by lifting your foot off the gas pedal instead of approaching at full speed and slamming on the brakes. It takes 20% more gas to accelerate to normal speed from a full stop than it does from four or five miles per hour.
4.Don't drive too fast or too slow. It takes 20% to 30% more gas to drive at 70 mph than 50 mph.
5.Maintain a steady speed on the highway. Avoid getting stuck behind slow cars where you have to slow down to their pace and then speed up to pass.

[From Deborah Fowles,Your Guide to Financial Planning]

Comments
on Aug 15, 2005
I like these... all except #7.



7.Don't warm your car up by letting it idle. The engine warms up faster when driving than it does when idling, and idling wastes about a quart of gas every 15 minutes.



I live in NH. If I don't let it warm up, it won't shift...


While 15 minutes might be a bit excessive... heck. Ya know how cold it gets here? LOL
on Aug 15, 2005
While 15 minutes might be a bit excessive... heck. Ya know how cold it gets here? LOL


I understand having lived in NY and knowing how cold the car engine gets overnight! Nothing you can do about that at all!
on Aug 15, 2005

3.Coast up to traffic jams by lifting your foot off the gas pedal instead of approaching at full speed and slamming on the brakes. It takes 20% more gas to accelerate to normal speed from a full stop than it does from four or five miles per


Not in a vehicle with a manual transmission. It's called put the tranny in nuetral and use the brakes. That's what they're for. This approach uses NO fuel because you are not taxing the engine at all.


4.Don't drive too fast or too slow. It takes 20% to 30% more gas to drive at 70 mph than 50 mph


I have a car that says this line is false. Drive my Ultima at 50 and you get approx 230 miles to the tank. Drive the same route at 70 and get almost 400 miles on the same amount of fuel. And that includes setting the cruise control for "both" speeds. Now not holding a constant speed will definetly hose your mileage!
on Aug 17, 2005
Not in a vehicle with a manual transmission. It's called put the tranny in nuetral and use the brakes.


I remember this way of driving from back home (my birth country) before automatics became popular!


have a car that says this line is false. Drive my Ultima at 50 and you get approx 230 miles to the tank. Drive the same route at 70 and get almost 400 miles on the same amount of fuel. And that includes setting the cruise control for "both" speeds. Now not holding a constant speed will definetly hose your mileage!


I guess it depends on the car then. Yea, I agree about the speed and losing mileage part!