40+ mpg
#21
When I'm doing tons of chores in town (grocery, mall, lunch, shoe repair shop, library) doing lots of stop-and-go and weaving through light traffic, my average MPG will quickly drop to about 28-30.
Of course, imagine how much fuel I'd be burning if I were driving our older van!
#23
Thanks Krimson, I had better mpg when I first started driving it, just cause I wasn't used to the car and probably took everything a lot easier. Not a huuuuge amount more but 2-3mpg more. I think I have fallen too far into the comfort zone again and am not aware of some of my driving habits. Time for me to start cracking down on paying attention again and see what I can pull off. Too jealous of reading people hypermiling and getting insane mpg, I would be happy with just really good haha. Though compared to my vehicle I had before this one this is a world of difference mpg wise. (Used to drive a 98 s10 with a 4.3L that got 15-17mpg highway!)
After a while I began to draw my own conclusions and had been following threads and understanding what I was dealing with. After that it was follow my impulse, learn from others [some great knowledge here] and now I'm seeing a good 38MPG in my daily driving world. HWY trips cut that a bit but I make it up on the other end. Urban/city bring it down to 35-36 but I'm not typically in that world. If I dog it - 32MPG is good.... don't take the dog out too much and if I do it ain't for long, just to make a point.
Sort of like I always have_
#24
Did a short test on my way home today, mix of highway and city and used S mode the whole time. Immediately am seeing a huge difference in a good way. Keeps me more aware and keeps it from down shifting when accelerating a little more. I will keep on trying this for a bit and I am thinking I will see good positive results!
#25
Cruise control has never gotten me good economy. It engages engine braking downhill which kills any momentum, it also doesn't allow for fluctuation in speed so it's constantly downshifting or depressing the gas pedal to keep up speed. Just by letting the car fluctuate a few mph when going down/up hills, you can improve economy.
also, the Fit loves 40-50mph in the manual trans. Also, if you can get in traffic that is moving at that speed and just maintain a little gas pressure, your economy will skyrocket. I've easily had 50+mpg over a few days when I really put my mind to it and kept myself "in traffic". I've never been able to do a full tank but I've had over 44mpg on a tank or two.
~SB
also, the Fit loves 40-50mph in the manual trans. Also, if you can get in traffic that is moving at that speed and just maintain a little gas pressure, your economy will skyrocket. I've easily had 50+mpg over a few days when I really put my mind to it and kept myself "in traffic". I've never been able to do a full tank but I've had over 44mpg on a tank or two.
~SB
#26
Cruise control has never gotten me good economy. It engages engine braking downhill which kills any momentum, it also doesn't allow for fluctuation in speed so it's constantly downshifting or depressing the gas pedal to keep up speed. Just by letting the car fluctuate a few mph when going down/up hills, you can improve economy.
also, the Fit loves 40-50mph in the manual trans. Also, if you can get in traffic that is moving at that speed and just maintain a little gas pressure, your economy will skyrocket. I've easily had 50+mpg over a few days when I really put my mind to it and kept myself "in traffic". I've never been able to do a full tank but I've had over 44mpg on a tank or two.
~SB
also, the Fit loves 40-50mph in the manual trans. Also, if you can get in traffic that is moving at that speed and just maintain a little gas pressure, your economy will skyrocket. I've easily had 50+mpg over a few days when I really put my mind to it and kept myself "in traffic". I've never been able to do a full tank but I've had over 44mpg on a tank or two.
~SB
#27
You need some wreckless driving lessons, I can go down to 20mpg if I want.
#29
on a recent trip from LA to San Diego and back, I wanted to see how efficient my 2010 base Fit a/t was at steady cruising on the freeway.
AFTER getting up to to 60-65 on the freeway, I reset the trip meter and refused to hit the brake at all, and used a feather-touch on the gas pedal. no drafting or crazy shit like that. but I did have to stay in the right lane to drive that slow (traffic was otherwise moving at 70+)
The ave MPG for the FIt for the first 100 miles down to SD was a whopping FOURTY SEVEN (47) mpg at the end of the trip. For maybe twenty minutes at the start of the drive the meter hovered around 52 mpg before slowly ticking back downwards.
I repeated the experiment on the return 100 mile trip back to LA. Got 46 mpg on the way back for freeway-only cruising at around 62 miles per hour.
This is meter-only. I did not calculate my mpg on this trip. My previous calculations when I first was testing out my car have indicated my meter reads about 1/2 to 3/4 mpg higher than calculated. But that still means the base a/t Fit gets 45+ mpg while cruising at 60 mph.
whoot
AFTER getting up to to 60-65 on the freeway, I reset the trip meter and refused to hit the brake at all, and used a feather-touch on the gas pedal. no drafting or crazy shit like that. but I did have to stay in the right lane to drive that slow (traffic was otherwise moving at 70+)
The ave MPG for the FIt for the first 100 miles down to SD was a whopping FOURTY SEVEN (47) mpg at the end of the trip. For maybe twenty minutes at the start of the drive the meter hovered around 52 mpg before slowly ticking back downwards.
I repeated the experiment on the return 100 mile trip back to LA. Got 46 mpg on the way back for freeway-only cruising at around 62 miles per hour.
This is meter-only. I did not calculate my mpg on this trip. My previous calculations when I first was testing out my car have indicated my meter reads about 1/2 to 3/4 mpg higher than calculated. But that still means the base a/t Fit gets 45+ mpg while cruising at 60 mph.
whoot
#31
Unfortunately, with my new commute, I haven't seen 40MPG in over 3 months. That lifetime AVG of 38mpg will likely begin to drop as I'm now getting an average of 33mpg (winter and taller tires are partially to blame) but on the lighter side... my commute is about 175 miles less each week. so I fill up about every 3 weeks.
~SB
~SB
#32
I envy you. I love to drive, but driving to and from work sucks. It takes 15 hours a week out of my leisure time!
#34
EDIT: My best so far, in wonderful Atlanta metro traffic, is 36 mpg. I know on the highway, without traffic, this car has plenty more for sure.
Last edited by 2012FitFan; 12-30-2011 at 09:11 PM.
#35
You're right about that. It was amazing the first time I got in it to test drive how much room it had compared to what it looked like. I knew right then I had to have it!
#36
I'm on a GD3 (2008) MT. I just bought the car about a month ago. HAve 70,000 on the car. It seemed to get about 32ish mpg. I drive booth city & highway. More city these days & I get on it a lot. Just noticed the other day I prob got about 28 mpg. This is all gauged by my rough math. I really need to see whats up w/ that. My style either has to change or something is up.
Plus I go about 75-80 on the highway. Thinking maybe 70-75 tops should help. I want the AFE intake & d1 spec throttle controller.
Plus I go about 75-80 on the highway. Thinking maybe 70-75 tops should help. I want the AFE intake & d1 spec throttle controller.
#38
Doing worse now that it's winter. I always struggle with mpgs. I have a 24 mile round trip drive to work. Twelve miles a trip is a tough challenge to keep the numbers good, especially in the winter. The only time I do super well is when I get out on the hwy- easily ticking up to the high thirties. If I just fuel up before a hwy trip I do stupendous. But suburban driving- my commute to work- summer= 33 and winter 28-30. Keep in mind that the first quarter tank after filling up is where you'll setup your best numbers. Put up big numbers at that point and you'll come out with good numbers at the end. Put up low numbers just after filling up, and you'll struggle to regain good numbers. The AVG ticks down faster than it'll tick up for you as you chug through the tank. The best habit you can learn is to let the car coast as much as possible. When the car is moving but you aren't using the pedal to do it, you'll see AVG continue to rise. And the quicker you get into fifth, the quicker you'll be more efficient. Slow accelleration doesn't do it with the fit. Run out the gears normally and get into fifth for best results in fuel economy. That and tire pressure. When I can't keep up fuel economy, it's tire pressure. When properly inflated, my AVG can remain rock steady without dropping.
Last edited by Shockwave199; 12-31-2011 at 03:12 AM.
#39
Been using 87 almost the whole time. The 3 tanks of 91/93 that I used successively returned an increase of 0mpg. only difference between that and 87 was the additional money I didn't have in my bank account. My 2 years of 38mpg average was all done on 87.
~SB
#40
36mpg metro atlanta. 09 Base auto. 87 octane. 30%/70% city/freeway.
If you feel the need to put more than regular gas in Honda's cheapest, lowest power, economy car, then you probably should have bought a BMW.
The only cars that benefit from higher octane are those where the manufacturer recommends it, or it has been modified with bolt on blowers etc.
Let the premium follies for 2011 commence!
If you feel the need to put more than regular gas in Honda's cheapest, lowest power, economy car, then you probably should have bought a BMW.
The only cars that benefit from higher octane are those where the manufacturer recommends it, or it has been modified with bolt on blowers etc.
Let the premium follies for 2011 commence!