Epinions.com 
Join Epinions | Learn More! | Sign In   

HomeCars & MotorsportsCarsWhat Should I Know About MPG?

Read Advice   Write an essay on this topic. 

What IS Gas Mileage, Anyway? and How Do You Calculate Yours??

Apr 02 '04 (Updated Jun 14 '08)

The Bottom Line Please stop telling us your gas mileage in terms of dollars per fill-up!

This is not a list of ways to improve your fuel economy. Shoplmart already wrote that advice.

This is also not a discussion of the disclaimer printed underneath EPA mileage estimates (you know, the one that says "your mileage may vary"). If you want information on that controversy, look here.

This is an arithmetic class (maths, for those whose native language is British English). It is a primer on how to calculate your gas mileage. I've grown weary of auto reviewers telling me that it only costs $25 to fill the tank on their {insert name of vehicle here}. That number is meaningless!! It's meaningless because your reader has no idea how many gallons it takes to fill the tank and also no idea how far you've driven since your last visit to the local AM/PM (or Starvin' Marvin's).

Determining your vehicle's gas mileage is very simple in this age of trip odometers*. Here's how you do it:

Step 1: Fill your fuel tank. Let the pump run until it shuts off automatically. Do not top off, because that adds to air pollution and wastes a small amount of fuel.

Step 2: Sit down in the driver's seat and zero out the trip odometer. Check your owner's manual for instructions.

Step 3: Drive your vehicle until you think you need to fill the tank again. Fill the tank, letting the pump run until it shuts off automatically. Get a receipt that shows the number of gallons.

Step 4: Check your trip odometer and record (or remember) the number.


You now have two numbers: The distance traveled and the number of gallons consumed. To calculate fuel economy, divide the first number by the second.

MPG = distance traveled ÷ gallons consumed

This number is reported (in the USA) as "miles per gallon."


Example

1) It took 27.7 gallons to fill your Hummer II. You've driven 293.5 miles since your last fill-up. Your gas mileage is calculated using the formula

MPG = 293.5 ÷ 27.7
Your fuel economy = 10.6 MPG (miles per gallon)


2) It took 13.2 gallons to fill your Honda Civic Hybrid. You've driven 551.8 miles since your last fill-up. Your gas mileage is calculated using the formula

MPG = 551.8 ÷ 13.2
Your fuel economy is 41.8 MPG (miles per gallon).


Since your results will vary (would the EPA lie to you? well, yes, they would) with driving conditions, you'll probably want to calculate this number over several fill-ups to get a good feeling for your mileage. Most drivers get lower mileage in their daily commutes as compared to long highway drives - that's why our friends with the EPA report both estimated City and Highway mileage.


By Way of Illustration

The cost of filling the Hummer is about twice that of filling the Honda, but the Civic's mileage is nearly four times that of the Hummer.


If You Live in the Metric World

Many countries that use the metric system report fuel consumption in liters per 100km instead of fuel economy in terms of mileage. Lots of people in the US are a little hazy on what a kilometer is, though most now know what a liter looks like, thanks to two- and three-liter bottles of soda. For all of us, here's a handy conversion factor:

MPG = 235.2 ÷ (liters per 100km)

Example:

Your Bentley consumes 21 liters of petrol per 100km of driving. To convert to miles per gallon:

MPG = 235.2 ÷ 21
Your fuel economy is about 11 miles per gallon.


Should you need to convert miles per gallon to liters per 100km, divide that same magic number (235.2) by the fuel economy in MPG. The Honda (above) consumes 5.63 liters per 100km, the Hummer, 22.2 liters per 100km.


There:

Now you no longer have an excuse to try to express your gas mileage in "dollars per fill-up"!


*You say you don't have a trip odometer? Don't have a cow: just scribble the odometer mileage on the receipt each time you fill up and do the subtraction. Use a calculator if you need to.

 Read all comments (13)
 Write your own comment
scmrak

Epinions.com ID:
scmrak
scmrak is a Lead on Epinions in Cars & Motorsports
scmrak is an Advisor on Epinions in Books
scmrak is a Top Reviewer on Epinions in Home and Garden, Hotels & Travel, Books
Epinions Most Popular Authors - Top 50
Location: ~240000E, 3300000N UTM15
Reviews written: 1373
Trusted by: 410 members
About Me:
Too soon gone, baby girl.
RIP our Belle: 10/31/99-12/1/09


Help | Member Center | Message Boards | Site Rules | User Agreement | Privacy Policy | Site Index | Topic Index  
About Epinions | Careers | Contact Epinions | Advertising  

Epinions | Shopping.com | Rent.com | Free Classifieds | Price Comparison UK

Shopping.com Network © 1999-2009 Shopping.com, Inc. Trademark Notice

Epinions.com periodically updates pricing and product information from third-party sources,
so some information may be slightly out-of-date. You should confirm all information before relying on it.