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Gas mileage - HELP!!! 38.3 MPG, what's wrong?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Fuel Economy' started by lonewolf69, Aug 10, 2010.

  1. lonewolf69

    lonewolf69 New Member

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    Ok, picked up the Prius IV with Solar & Nav, Sunday 8/1/2010 National Clearance incentive and ODOMETER now reads 368 miles but there are only two bars left on the FUEL guage and the TRIP meter calcultes there are about 96 miles left to go before empty.

    So 96 miles to go PLUS 368 miles on the odometer puts my estimated distance to empty at around 460 ~ 480. If you divide this number by the number of gallons of fuel for a FULL tank 11.9 or 12, that would mean my average MPG for the Prius would be around 38.3333 MPG...

    Folks, I'm driving in Long Island NY, 60~70% local driving home to local summer camp, home depot, tennis, piano, and soccer practice all within 20 mile radius the other 30% is highway miles round trip (WORK) 20 miles round trip Monday to Friday, A/C is running most of the time with the FAN set to LO and temp set to 76 degrees while outside temp is around 85+ degrees, at least for this week...

    I was expecting to get mid 500 miles before fill up NOT mid 400 miles... Tire pressure aside, what else can I do to increase the mileage...?

    FYI - Car is just one week and one day old so it's still on it's first tankful of gas. Car was delivered with 8 miles on the odometer when I took possesion...

    I "think" I provided enough info for you all, if NOT, please reply and I'll be happy to divulge any additional info as needed...

    :confused:

    Crestfallen new Prius owner...
     
  2. xs650

    xs650 Senior Member

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    You should calculate gas mileage by starting with a full tank, driving the car, then refilling the tank.

    Divide Miles traveled/gallons used = mpg

    The way you are doing it isn't much more accurate than using your horoscope.:D

    When miles to empty = 0, you should have very roughly 1.5 gallons left in your tank, but don't count on that.

    Your zero miles fill-up will be more like 10.4 gallons than 11.9, so using your horoscope method:cool:, you are running about 46 mpg. Not bad for a new car and your driving scenario.

    You won't really know how good it is until you fill it.
     
  3. Bica2go

    Bica2go New Member

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    I agree with xs650 that your methodology for estimating your mpg is suspect. What does your display say? Based on the fillups I've done over the past year, I find that mine tends to overstate the mpg between 2-3mpg.

    You're on your first tank and the car is still in the break in phase so your mileage should improve over time and there's a learning curve to driving the car efficiently. You can search here and find all sorts of driving tips (pulse & glide) that can help you increase your mpg. If you've been using the A/C that has an impact on mpg.

    Enjoy your new Prius!
     
  4. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    What's your trip meter saying? That will be a better current guide. Subtract 5% for pessimism.

    I've hit 0 miles to go by the car's estimate and never put more than 9.8 gallons in. It doesn't even get close to the full tank size.
     
  5. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    It's too early to panic, mostly for several reasons:

    1) The fuel gauge in your Prius isn't accurate enough to give a meaningful estimate of the remaining fuel, other than to say that you need to buy more fuel.

    2) This is the first tank: you have no way of knowing how much fuel was really in the tank to start with.

    3) Give the car some time to break in before you worry about mileage.

    4) Your mileage will improve as you learn to drive it.

    Tom
     
    1 person likes this.
  6. Joe166

    Joe166 New Member

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    That is probably about right for someone like me who was coming from a muscle car and had no idea how to feather the accelerator and how to "pulse and glide". It will come to you. I really think the most important thing for fuel economy is the gauges that show you the effect of various inputs to the engine like pedal depth and coasting.

    You will get better, but I doubt that I will ever get to some of the really high mpg results I have read on here. Maybe they are even true.
     
  7. mwok86

    mwok86 New Member

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    The first question to ask would be, have you read the manual on how to drive a Prius (coasting, braking, accelerating). If you drive the Prius like a normal car, I'd say you'd get around 450miles.

    However, if you drive your car like a Prius, you can easily get over 600miles and sometimes even 700miles.
     
  8. cycle11111

    cycle11111 New Member

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    The dealer tank is basically junk for mpg calcs so do not worry about it. As others have said the Prius displayed mpg is about 2mpg optimistic but it is close so that gauge is a good indicator. Once you fill yourself then if you are interested you can start manually calculating fuel mileage and a fillup will only get about 10 gallons max into the tank if you are down to one bar or less on the fuel gauge. Also I suggest searching You Tube for the Prius fuel economy video a Prius owner did as it is a great guide to learn max mpg techniques - it will help immensely and you can decide how aggressively you want to apply those techniques. Getting EPA numbers or close is actually very doable once you learn a few of the tips that help max out mpg and you won't be holding up anyone.

    Also your car will improve somewhat after 1000 miles or so with break in
     
  9. Codyroo

    Codyroo Senior Member

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    Hi Lonewolf!

    OK, as others have said, it is a bit early to be concerned. If you would like to get a better idea of what you car is doing MPG wise you have options.

    The "optimistic" option is to look at the instant MPG read out (for tank consumption). I suspect it is in the 50 mpg range.

    The second "less optimistic" way is to take your current mileage on the tank (368) add the miles to zero (96) and divide by 10. This puts you in the 46 MPG area. Likely when you fill up, your mileage will be between these two ranges (and closer to 46 rather than 50).

    Your MPG's will improve as the car "breaks in". You are assuming you had a full tank when you got it. Don't sweat the first fill up. You'll have a much better idea of your MPG and range with the second fill up.

    Don't sweat the blinking last pip too much either. It usually comes on when you have ~ 2 gallons of gas left in the tank. When mine came on the other day, my miles to zero was around 38 miles. When I filled up (within 10 miles of the pip blinking) I put in 9.7 gallons of gas (thus I had ~2.2 - 2.3 gallons left in the tank). I'm not saying ignore the flashing pip, but rather, don't panic if/when it comes on. You'll likely be able to drive 90+ miles before running out of gas.
     
  10. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    Lonewolf, I like you a lot, I like everyone until they prove otherwise.* Spend the first two tanks learning the controls, judging your visibility, and breaking in the engine so that both you and the car will last a long time, then on the third tank, you can start practicing techniques for good gas mileage. Knowing how to get into B to go down long hills, and how the brakes feel when you hit a slippery patch are much more important than saving a dollar on the first two tanks of gas. If you have bad mileage on the third tank, everyone will want to help as it is not just the dealer 'short sheeting' you.

    *It is sad some prove otherwise SO quickly.
     
  11. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I found the first 'dealer' tank was 89 octane, not the 87 that tends to have higher energy content. I was able to detect the difference in hill-climb tests. After driving the tank to 'empty', the subsequent tanks showed improved MPG:
    [​IMG]

    Something else to get used to is making sure the car is off when you park. Even now, I find it easy to leave the car running only to be reminded by the 'beep' from time to time. Leave the car running overnight and your tank mileage will suffer.

    Bob Wilson
     
  12. lonewolf69

    lonewolf69 New Member

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    Hi Folks,

    Thank you ALL for your wonderful advice! Today is Wednesday 8/11, 10 days from the day I drove home from the dealership with my new Prius and it is also the first day that I'm filling up my tank with 87 octane gas. My Fuel guage showed up with one bar left on the meter and I didn't want to run on fumes so I filled her up.

    Fuel Guage with one bar took 9.38 gallons to top off the tank. I've driven about 375 so far and I'm going to relax and wait until the third tank before I start getting concerned. Hopefully by then, I'll also get the permanent registration and Hybrid Stickers by then...

    I'm also going to keep an eye out on the INSTANT MPG gauge and try to baby the gas pedals so that the needle doesn't dip below 50, but it's very hard to do...

    The past 10 days, I've been driving in ECO mode all this time, shoud I turn that off and try "normal" mode instead...? Tank is full and tomorrow will be the first trip with the 2nd tank of gas...
     
  13. Codyroo

    Codyroo Senior Member

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    You don't really need to "baby" the gas pedal (or drive like a senior citizen) to get great MPG's. In fact, sometimes "babying" the car will result in suboptimal MPG's (and annoy the living bejeezus of folks around you).

    Getting up to speed briskly (not flooring it, but not going slow either) is considered one decent way to improve MPG's. The thought is that the engine is more efficient under a load, and a brisk acceleration will put it under a load. Once at your desired speed, you can back off the gas pedal and your MPG reading will shoot up.

    The real trick is giving yourself room from the person in front of you and to train yourself to look well ahead of you as you drive. Anticipate when you'll need to slow down (brake lights of freeway traffic ahead, traffic lights turning to red) and let off the gas pedal earlier. The typcial advice you'll see is "drive it like you don't have brakes". It will help your MPG's as well as lengthen the life of your brake pads.

    But probably the best advice is to "just drive it" for the first few tanks. You get familiar to the car and see what "just driving it" will get you MPG wise. Then you can switch to the MPG video game, trying to change your driving style to see what techniques you can use to improve MPG's as well as adjusting your driving style and behaviors.

    Other things that will help would be something as simple as measuring your air pressure in your tires (get yourself an air pressure gauge) and add additional air above the recommended air pressure. The tires will tell you what the max cold air pressure is (likely 42 - 44 psi), it is very safe to fill it up to those values (actually, the tires can take wayyyyy beyond those (double? triple?) without issue. You may compromise ride smoothness for MPG's by raising the air pressure. I run my tires at 44 psi front, 42 psi rear, and have not noticed a difference in ride comfort.

    Good luck and happy driving!
     
  14. spyderx

    spyderx Member

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    Seriously, try "rebooting" by disconnecting your negative batter terminal. Mine had immediate impact!
     
  15. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    I know you've answered many of the questions I pose at http://priuschat.com/forums/gen-iii...-answer-these-questions-esp-if-youre-new.html, but can you answer some of the ones haven't been addressed?

    You can skip the stuff about the state, region, and 12 volt battery and obviously the last question.

    What's really important is the trip length. Short trips, esp. in city traffic and stop in go will kill your mileage. It sounds like you have pretty short trips because I deduce that in 2 days, you've only driven a total of 23 miles. Is that right? How long in time and lengths were each of these trips? About how long was the car turned off in between each?

    I totally concur w/post 2, 4, 8 and what Codyroo says. Babying it can actually hurt your mileage.
     
  16. Colonel Ronson

    Colonel Ronson New Member

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    your first MPG tank will always be lower. For one, i seriously doubt the tank was full when you drove it off the lot. The dealer probably left the car on idle for hours. When i took delivery of my car, the MPG read 22 mpg. When i filled the gas tank, i had drove 501 miles.

    Your method of calculation is faulty. It's not really 38.3 mpg. Wait until you fill your gas tank and measure it that way. And as you drive, your mileage will improve as your habits adapt to the prius and the engine breaks in.

    And to the above post, there is no such thing as 89 octane gas. To get 89 octane gas, gas stations mix 87 and 91 together. Also the definition of octane is simply a gasoline's resistance to engine knocking.

    Octane also has NOTHING to do with energy content. Octane is simply the measure of how easily the fuel will ignite. Lower octane gasoline will ignite easier than higher octane gas, which is why hi-performance/compression engines need high octane gas beacuse low octane gas will pre-ignite, causing "knocking." IT has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with energy content. That's why in higher altitude states they sell 85 octane gasoline. There is less oxygen up there, so the fuel won't ignite as easily. And i'm pretty sure people in colorado are still reporting the same MPG as someone on the california coast.

    Okay, i lied. After doing some research, higher octane gasoline has a somewhat higher energy content than lower octane gasoline. But according to every expert i've read, the difference is very minimal, and almost impossible to notice while driving. The reason why somebody would get less mileage using lower octane gas instead of higher octane gas is because if their engine was designed for high octane gas, then using lower octane gas would force the engine's knock sensor to retard the engine timing, therefore compensating for the pre-ignition. Reducing your engine timing usually decreases horsepower, usually decreasing fuel economy.

    How do i know this? used to drive an infiniti. Required 91+ octane gasoline, although i occasionally filled 87 or 89.
     
  17. bac

    bac Active Member

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    Ding ding - we have a winner!

    -Brad
     
  18. lonewolf69

    lonewolf69 New Member

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    Brad and all others:

    I have in my 2nd post in this thread where I thanked everyone. I already filled my tank to full capacity:

    Odomenter = 375
    Gas Tank Refill = 9.39 gallons
    MPG = 39.9

    I will NEVER use the VODOO/HOROSCOPE methodology again AKA using the "Miles to zero gauge"... I have also read most of the threads that says I should take the break in period into account and just get used to using the car...

    At almost 40mpg I'm not going to complain because its much better than my Lexus GX470... Again thank you all for the wonderful advice, especially about the Pulse & Glide and Cruise Crontrol (different thread) but still sound advice...

    Finally one last question Mon ~ Fri. commuiting to/from home/work equals about 18 miles round trip LIE 495 Nassau county and on Weekends local trips home to the library/local restaurants/local shopping/etc... Please do let me know if ECO mode vs. Normal is better..?
     
  19. jburns

    jburns Senior Senior Member

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    Also keep in mind if the dealer filled your tank with "free" gas it probably wasn't really full. Based on the numbers you have posted so far I expect you to be a very happy owner in a few weeks.

    EC vs Normal mode will not make a noticeable difference in your mileage. Pick the one that makes the car feel best to you and suits your way of driving. I tried Eco for a few weeks when I first got mine and couldn't get used to that 80s Yugo feel. I use normal exclusively now.
     
  20. ABL

    ABL Member

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    The only time I get 50+ MPG is when I give the kids the car for trips to LA (Disney Land Visiting friends) I average around 40MPG but I also drive with a heavy foot and Im not really concerned about the overall milage. My second car is a 400hp mustang so 40MPG looks great to me. Enjoy your Prius it's a great car.
    Regards,
    Jim