I spend my days looking for the lowest reasonable speed. Don't ask me why, but I got curious about life at the other end. It was time to do some research. Of course, I didn't want to risk losing my driver's license, so I sought asylum in Germany. The Autobahn knows no general speed limit. I planned on leaving very early today, so I had the road all to myself. 180 km/h is a very high speed, even on the Autobahn, and other traffic easily slows you down. Things went a little different today, and I left a few hours late. There was too much traffic to get the 10 km run I wanted. But I managed two shorter ones of ~4 km. One in each direction. The first run showed 12.5 l/100 km, the return run 12.9 l/100 km (18.8 resp 18.2 mpg). The attached screen shot of the last run is from the footage I shot with my N95. A bit of background data: the weather was perfect, 23° C, almost no wind. I used a nearly flat stretch of highway between exit 3 and 4 on Autobahn 3. My tires are at 2.7 bar. I hope Bob Wilson can use my research (ahum) to add another datapoint in his graph. I will need a lot of hypermiling to wash the sins off my right foot.
The Autobahn can be fun, but there aren't as many places where the speed limit is unlimited as we Americans think. If I do the math correctly that work out to about 120 MPH? Was that as fast as it will go?
True, speed limits are on the increase. 30% has a permanent speed limit, 17% a conditional (depending on time or weather or other factors). But what I find really annoying is the multitude of speed limits. Not only different speeds (130-110, I think 120 and 100 also occur but am not sure) and for short stretches of only a few km, sometimes it changes so often, it drives you nuts. 183 km/h would be nearly 114 mph. The 193 on the speedometer includes a safety margin. You can clearly feel the speed limiter kick in when it reaches 193. The acceleration from 130 km/h to top speed takes around 30 s.
Still have friends there in your little village. Will be visiting The Hague in a few weeks. Sure miss a lot of things about living there--especially the cycling!