Wednesday, 14 May 2008
Slow driving equals better fuel economy Print E-mail
Daily Herald   

I have been doing fuel economy tests on a car. My "test track" is the stretch of Interstate 80 from Salt Lake City to the Nevada line. On my way there, I drove through heavy morning traffic south of Salt Lake. Afterward, I drove back to Pleasant Grove at mid-day along the same path.

There were astonishing differences, I thought, between the frenetic morning and the serene mid-day traffic. In the morning, almost everyone pushed the speed limit near to being ticketed (75 mph). Other times were wasted in slow-downs. Driving along in this traffic, my test car got just so-so fuel economy -- the meter showed 52 miles per gallon.

Coming back after the test, traffic was much lighter and the cars were slower, about 65 mph. On the mid-day saunter home, I set the cruise at 57 mph and didn't touch anything until I got to my Pleasant Grove exit. The meter showed 75 miles per gallon for the 50-mile homeward trip. (A light wind from the north was helping the car along.) The point I am trying to make is that if we drive efficiently and burn less gas, then we also will be helping to keep Utah's air a lot cleaner.


• Ernie Rogers,


Pleasant Grove

Article views: 231  
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Discuss (1 posts)

dave
May 17 2008 00:24:07
This thread discusses the Content article: Slow driving equals better fuel economy

Are you familiar with the economic principle of opportunity cost? My time is more valuable than the gas I put in my car. Which incidentally gets 11 MPG.
#368081


Discuss this article on the forums. (1 posts)
Generated in 0.20079 Seconds