![]() |
Outside temperature and MPG
Morning All
Was just sat at work wondering after filling in my Fuelly.com entry, is MPG connected outside temperature? As the summer has drawn to a close my MPG has slowly reduced. |
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
Yes, more choke is required to start a colder engine. Not sure about when warm and running though.
|
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
Yes, MPG will be higher in warmer weather. Factors include air density, warm up time, air resistance, rolling resistance and gasoline formulation.
|
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
I'm no expert but the basics of it are, the more air you can get into the engine, the more fuel goes in, the more power you get out. Colder air is denser than warm air, so a dry road on a frosty day, the engine may potentially feel slightly more perky.
|
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
More time spent on choke before it's warm.
I think rest of factors are minimal and probably cancel out to some degree or are lost in the rest of the "noise" that comes with measuring economy. |
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
Cheers guys, odd thing is I rarely use the choke, only when it gets really really cold which it isn't yet.
|
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
as it gets colder/wetter your speeds reduce so it makes sense then your MPG will be better. yes cold air is better than hot air but in reality it makes no fekin difference unless you have carbs that like to ice up.
|
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
Are you using the air conditioning more in the colder weather? That can make a difference...
Jambo |
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...fuel-economy-o
Lots of information like this is available just by using Google. |
Re: Outside temperature and MPG
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 06:54 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® - Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.