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#1
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#2
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My 1988 GL 1.8 SPFI has typically been getting about 32-36 mi/gal. During the latter half of this year I have had to do a lot of maintainence and repair on the car and now I'm getting around 27-28 mi/gal. The only thing I can think of that might be related is that I've put some fuel injector cleaner in the fuel tank. Are there other things that I might try/observer? Justin |
#3
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Did you put new tires on? My average mpg went down when I put new tires on my car. |
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#5
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I did. Interesting notion. Maybe I can even experiment with tire pressure too. I figured higher pressure would translate to a more |
#6
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In "today's" tire world, it seems there's more variation in fuel economy from tire to tire than 15-20 years ago. More tires are "performance" oriented, meaning softer compounds, more aggressive tread patterns, etc. It's not a perfect measure, but I've found an inverse relationship between fuel economy and the UTQG mileage figure: in other words, a tire rated as "Treadwear 200" usually turns in worse fuel economy than one rated as "Treadwear 500" kind of thing. There CAN be big differences in fuel economy based on those parameters, plus the larger diameter Ed mentioned, and the pressure issue. |
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For myself, I've generally found a slight increase in pressure (2-4 psi over the door sticker) would help fuel economy, and handling, w/o hurting the ride. Above that level, you've gotta experiment to find what works FOR YOU! |
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Also, you mentioned recent "work" on the engine. What all was involved? |
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And then there's always the issue of "winter gas" and poor mileage that comes up about this time of year... |
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