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View Full Version : Pure City Driving MPG


jayeh
08-15-2014, 09:25 PM
Hi Guys,

I'm curious what numbers other folks are getting for real life 100% downtown city driving? I'm talking full on 40-50kph (25-30mph), traffic lights every block, slowing down and speeding up to pass bikes, idling in traffic and NOT easy suburban type driving on 60-70kph open roads where you can actually coast a bit and time traffic lights and do other handy fuel economy things.

I usually get about 23 mpg city.

Anyone else get higher/lower?

IllusionX
08-15-2014, 10:41 PM
I have a bit of a mix city driving with some 60-70kmh zones. With AC, I get about 7.5L/100km.

bronsin
08-16-2014, 01:06 PM
Now that its summer Im getting 37.5 mpg on my ~6 mile commute to work. :headbang:

Winter I get 32 mpg.

Only a mile or so is in the city.

I only go 30-35 mph in traffic where the speed limit is 45 mph and many cars go 60. To do that Ive installed radar and a special chip to the ECM that tracks other traffic and swerves my car in and out of traffic faster other human drivers can. It sees other cars and computes a course for my Yaris that will cause them to swerve into each other and explode in flames as they try to avoid me! It can compute the trajectories of 100 cars simultaneously! :biggrin:

Its a package from the same people who invented Iron Dome. :w00t:

Its WAY better than a ScanGauge!

nookandcrannycar
08-16-2014, 06:07 PM
I only go 30-35 mph in traffic where the speed limit is 45 mph and many cars go 60. To do that Ive installed radar and a special chip to the ECM that tracks other traffic and swerves my car in and out of traffic faster other human drivers can. It sees other cars and computes a course for my Yaris that will cause them to swerve into each other and explode in flames as they try to avoid me! It can compute the trajectories of 100 cars simultaneously! :biggrin:

Its a package from the same people who invented Iron Dome. :w00t:

Its WAY better than a ScanGauge!

:bellyroll::bellyroll::bellyroll::bellyroll:

jack black
08-17-2014, 01:56 PM
My kid in college drives her yaris mostly in city only. She isn't good at monitoring MPG, but when I did some calculations, it turns out 28 MPG. Big "improvement" compared to 25 MPG she was getting in her RIP corolla. This is AT, lots of AC use, slow speeds and short trips (5-7 miles).

But, the driving the OP describes is even worse than she is doing, so I thing 23 MPG is reasonable.

If you want good MPG in city, hybrid yaris (prius c) is the ticket.

dj92
08-18-2014, 05:36 PM
constantly 6,1l/100km with many brutal accelerations ;)

jayeh
08-22-2014, 10:01 PM
constantly 6,1l/100km with many brutal accelerations ;)

I barely get that on the highway!

I wish they sold the 1.0 engine over here.

SpeedyYaris
08-22-2014, 10:59 PM
:o my lowest tank was 24 and i stayed in the city... But while on the highway,, if you have the patience to drive 60-65, you will get in the mid 40s for mpg... amazing :D

Kar98
09-14-2014, 09:37 AM
35 mpg, driving 17 miles clear across DFW, much of it stop and go highway, and some even slower stop and go city streets, but also sections of highway where I turn it up to eighty mph.

WRX
09-18-2014, 01:02 AM
I get 26mpg city. I live in San Francisco. Tires all at 32psi. When I had tires at 28psi for a cushy ride my mpg was 23mpg. I am lowered on 15 konig feather rims tire size 185/55/15.

jayeh
10-08-2014, 02:31 PM
Anyone keep track of their average speed on a scan gauge (or similar device)? My average speed per tank is only about 23-25mph. That explains the low mpg!

albee213
12-18-2014, 10:21 PM
I know this doesn't really matter, but I do not think of that as speed but more like every hour the car is on its traveled 23-25 miles.

vrait
12-18-2014, 11:29 PM
Nevermind haha

Pokey
12-19-2014, 01:58 PM
I get 6.2l/100km with all city driving. Mostly 50km
38MPG US
45MPG Imperial

That's with 1.5L and manual

Drops significantly in winter, I think part of it is the winter tires, but part of it is that when it hits-30 and lower everything takes more energy. Including me

nookandcrannycar
12-19-2014, 07:27 PM
I get 26mpg city. I live in San Francisco. Tires all at 32psi. When I had tires at 28psi for a cushy ride my mpg was 23mpg. I am lowered on 15 konig feather rims tire size 185/55/15.

^^^^^ The most exasperating large city in the U.S. to drive and park in (IMO).....and I've driven in all of the 40 largest except Charlotte......and I'm a Bay Area native.

BennyLava
02-03-2015, 04:46 PM
33 mpg for me in pure city driving. 2009 sedan, Royal purple oil, K&N air filter. Those are the only mods.

bairjo
02-05-2015, 08:18 PM
I haven't checked it for a while, but I was getting a constant 33mpg city in my 2010. Got the same when I had my 08. Same driving habits I guess.

jayeh
02-15-2015, 12:43 AM
Anyone track their average speed with a scan gauge?

From what everyone here is reporting there must be something terribly wrong with my car since I'm only getting 23-25mpg per tank, but I'm willing to bet that it's because everyone does far more suburban driving than I do. My average speed for the last tank was 24mph and I got 23mpg.

bronsin
02-15-2015, 08:52 AM
Anyone track their average speed with a scan gauge?

From what everyone here is reporting there must be something terribly wrong with my car since I'm only getting 23-25mpg per tank, but I'm willing to bet that it's because everyone does far more suburban driving than I do. My average speed for the last tank was 24mph and I got 23mpg.


I doubt you got into high gear at all.

shepd
02-15-2015, 03:29 PM
Winter hurts your mpg because the car is open loop until the engine warms up. In the summer, that's really fast. In the winter, you could be driving for several minutes with horrible gas mileage. Idling doesn't really help because it's still open loop and it takes a very long time to get the engine warm when it doesn't have a load.

edmscan
02-17-2015, 02:24 AM
Winter hurts your mpg because the car is open loop until the engine warms up. In the summer, that's really fast. In the winter, you could be driving for several minutes with horrible gas mileage. Idling doesn't really help because it's still open loop and it takes a very long time to get the engine warm when it doesn't have a load.

I just checked my mileage and this is so true. I have gone from a high of 5.4 L/100 km (43.53 mpg) to a low of 9.63 L/100 Km (24.43 MPG). That is with .. very very little highway driving. I hate going on the highway.

That was obviously in the summer and winter respectively. My ScanGauge backs up my thoughts .. mileage is bad bad on any short winter trips.

Ben_
02-18-2015, 01:29 AM
I get something around 24 when I'm driving on the race track at miller motorsports on a tank

During regular driving (75% city less than 45mph) I get about 32-36mpg with somewhat not mpg oriented driving

Jcp123
02-27-2015, 05:26 PM
Pure city...anywhere from 17ish loaded with myself, wife, and two kids in Dallas CBD with A/C running full blast to mid-30s running errands around home. Depends on the errand trip though, I can manage lower 40s on certain drives.

BennyLava
02-28-2015, 01:21 PM
I don't understand the disparity in mileages here. Are you guys a bunch of leadfoots? LOL

I usually see low 30's. The lowest I ever got in pure city was 29. This is all tested at the pump, I don't have a scangauge. Then again, I don't do traffic jams either. I either won't go to the city, or won't go during traffic times. I work in a smaller town.

Amdkt7
03-12-2015, 05:34 PM
Using a Scan Gauge to monitor the fuel economy during driving can be very revealing. Watching the instant MPG read out you will see something like 4-8 mpg in first gear (moderate acceleration). Shift to second and it goes up to around 12, third around 18 MPG, fourth gear 23 MPG, and fifth would be around 26.

The important take away from that is that fifth gear is where you want to be. The more time you spend in the low gears the more fuel you burn with out actually moving on down the road.

Of course when you are at traffic lights your efficiency goes to zero.

I mainly monitor my average and pay little attention to the instant reading as pulse and glide works better than a light foot. Get up to speed as quick as you can, traffic permitting. One half throttle does not seem to be too much, and shifting too early is wasted effort as well. Best to shift around 3k RPM so as to operate the engine in the most efficient band, then once you can get to the highest gear you can then back off and drive with a light foot at low rpm.

Jcp123
03-12-2015, 05:41 PM
When I stayed at a hotel in Dallas CBD, my trips were 17-28mpg when I had no or precious little freeway use.

Jcp123
03-12-2015, 05:44 PM
Using a Scan Gauge to monitor the fuel economy during driving can be very revealing. Watching the instant MPG read out you will see something like 4-8 mpg in first gear (moderate acceleration). Shift to second and it goes up to around 12, third around 18 MPG, fourth gear 23 MPG, and fifth would be around 26.

The important take away from that is that fifth gear is where you want to be. The more time you spend in the low gears the more fuel you burn with out actually moving on down the road.

Of course when you are at traffic lights your efficiency goes to zero.

I mainly monitor my average and pay little attention to the instant reading as pulse and glide works better than a light foot. Get up to speed as quick as you can, traffic permitting. One half throttle does not seem to be too much, and shifting too early is wasted effort as well. Best to shift around 3k RPM so as to operate the engine in the most efficient band, then once you can get to the highest gear you can then back off and drive with a light foot at low rpm.

Actually, low rpm/high load is where the gold is at. SG or an UltraGauge (what I'm now using) can calculate load, typically you want the highest load you can get without popping the car into open loop.

Doesn't work as well for us with autotragic transmissions. My Echo basically lives under 2000rpm.

Jcp123
03-12-2015, 05:52 PM
Winter hurts your mpg because the car is open loop until the engine warms up. In the summer, that's really fast. In the winter, you could be driving for several minutes with horrible gas mileage. Idling doesn't really help because it's still open loop and it takes a very long time to get the engine warm when it doesn't have a load.

My Echo really doesn't run open loop for very long. A half-mile is the longest it's ever taken for it to heat the O2 sensors enough to run closed loop.

Amdkt7
03-12-2015, 05:55 PM
I have experimented with both low rpm/high load and just get to fifth as quick as possible. I could not really tell any difference, I could still exceed 50 mpg on my 20 mile commute to work even when I raced away from every traffic light.

Think about how long it takes to get to 5th when you shift too early. I find that getting in 5th as soon as you can saves in the long run. Try it and see if you notice any difference. I'm getting good results with a automatic Corolla doing the same thing.

Amdkt7
03-12-2015, 05:57 PM
The Yaris does warm up fast when driven, however on short trips no matter what I do that warm up costs so much that it takes at least five miles to get my average mpg up to 40. Short trips suck, best to combine them if possible.

Jcp123
03-12-2015, 05:58 PM
No matter how you do it, getting to top gear early is beneficial.

My SVT Focus was good at this. In 6th by 30mph. Only averaged 28mpg in that thing though, plus it needed hi-test.

Jcp123
03-12-2015, 06:01 PM
The Yaris does warm up fast when driven, however on short trips no matter what I do that warm up costs so much that it takes at least five miles to get my average mpg up to 40. Short trips suck, best to combine them if possible.

True. My commute is 7.5mi each way, and it takes a while to bust through the 40mpg mark.