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10 Tanks of Gas
Posted on February 2nd, 2009 No commentsToday I finished the 10th tank of gas in my new Fit. The EPA mileage estimates for a 2009 Honda Fit Sport with manual transmission are 27 mpg in the city and 33 mpg on the highway. Here are my mile per gallon stats:
- 33.91 mpg (317.0 miles, 9.349 gallons)
- 33.13 mpg (310.4 miles, 9.368 gallons)
- 33.84 mpg (337.7 miles, 9.979 gallons)
- 34.93 mpg (339.6 miles, 9.723 gallons)
- 35.13 mpg (341.9 miles, 9.737 gallons)
- 35.93 mpg (330.0 miles, 9.185 gallons)
- 35.02 mpg (327.0 miles, 9.337 gallons)
- 33.71 mpg (277.3 miles, 8.225 gallons)
- 36.98 mpg (346.8 miles, 9.377 gallons)
- 35.68 mpg (357.0 miles, 10.005 gallons)
That gives me an overall average of about 35 mpg. Not bad! The car is totally stock, and I am primarily driving in stop and go traffic on the way to and from work. I try to start slowly, shift around 2500 rpm, and coast down hills. Also, I have not needed to use the air conditioning very much. The biggest factor, however, is the realtime and per-trip mpg displays on my dashboard.
There’s nothing quite like instant feedback. If I zoom up a hill, my realtime readout gets into the low teens and the per-trip display may drop a tenth of a point or more. Conversely, when I set the cruise control to 60 mph on a flat stretch of highway, I see the realtime mpg go above 40 mpg and the per-trip meter starts ticking upwards. I have to wonder what would happen if these displays were required in all cars. In fact, if you own a car made after 1996, you could add such a display right now by purchasing a widget that plugs into your cars OBD II connector. Although I have not used it, the ScanGauge II has been recommended by several people over at cleanmpg.com and fitfreak.net.