Some Additional FE Info
Well, I just came back from my vacation. I drove to a lake about 105 miles away. I had to make a trip home, and then back again. During my trip home, about 80 miles away, I filled up with gas (Chevron). When I got home my average FE was listed as 54.9 mpg on the display. This is the highest I have ever seen on my car. I then drove back to the lake (105 miles). I was still at around 45 mpg. A day later, I drove home and was at around 46 mpg. These trips were all highway miles, driving 60 miles per hour, in 76-90 degree temps. I didn't do any hypermiling techniques, other than keeping the accelerator steady at 60 miles per hour. I had my wife, two kids, two dogs, and a trunk full of camping stuff. Don't ask me how I got it all in there, it wasn't fun.
I have 300 miles on this tank now, and my FE is still 42 mpg. It seems to be going down now that I am back home. My commute to work is 15 miles, but I am not getting the FE that I was getting while driving 105 miles. Also, city driving for me typically lowers my FE, since there seems to be a lot of starts and stops that require me to go 35 miles per hour. Just when I get up to speed, I have to stop again. I could drive in E mode, but it would take too long to get up to speed.
Overall, I was able to get the best FE to date in this car while driving highway miles. I have read that hybrids do not do well on the highway. I would have to say it all depends on the car, driver and road. I only wish I could maintain the 54.9 mpg. On the mileage database listed in my sig, I am only averaging 35.4 mpg. I can now see how some people turn out really impressive numbers while driving a hybrid.
Anyhow, I just wanted to provide a bit more information for the TCH. I have about 3000 miles on my car now, and it has no mods other than the factory 50th Anniversary Edition.
|