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The cheapest ways to save on gas

Posted Jun 13 2008, 02:28 PM by Des Toups
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The ultimate gas-saving gadget is very close to free: a scalding-hot cup of McDonald's coffee, perched in the cupholder next to your thigh -- with the lid off.
 
You'd drive a little differently, right? Maybe ease into the gas more than before, look ahead a little further so you don't have to slow down for the next light, or maybe even plan your route to avoid stops and starts altogether. Slow and steady wins the gas mileage race.
 
That's the entire premise behind "hypermiling," gas mileage treated as a competitive sport. Its most ardent fans wear the gas-miser's equivalent of spandex: blocked-off radiator intakes and cardboard duct-taped over the rear wheels to help cheat the wind. Yet even the these zealots would be the first to tell you it's the driver, not the car, that makes all the difference.
 
You'd like to duplicate their results (most can easily beat the EPA's mileage estimates by half, according to the posts over at CleanMPG, mecca for hypermilers), but without adding a tinfoil spoiler to the back of your minivan? Let's assume that you've done the easy, free stuff, like inflating your tires correctly, combining errands and removing all the junk in the trunk.

First, try the coffee trick, but maybe with a cup of tepid tap water first. The object is to avoid spilling anything, not to cheat death. That comes later.

Next, hypermiler Bill Walsh of Everett, Wash., recommends a $5 roll of duct tape to smooth out the front end of the car and a $5 pressure gauge to overinflate tires to 40 psi. "Use what you save to buy better tires next time," he advises. Better, to a hypermiler, means rock-hard, roll-forever cheapies.

If the coffee trick has you staring at the center console rather than the road, consider a gadget like the Digital Fuel Mizer, which does electronically what a sloshing cuppa joe does for free. A small box of vertical and horizontal accelerometers, it perches on your dashboard or any level spot, beeping and flashing any time the car isn't level (which it interprets as aggressive, fuel-wasting driving). MSRP is $69.95, but you can poke around and find it cheaper.

If you're going to spend money to save gas, the most efficient investment might be a real-time mpg gauge that keeps score as you drive. Many fancier newer cars have these standard (if there's any kind of mpg readout, check your owner's manual to see if the car has an instant-mpg setting). But if your car doesn't have one, the weapon of choice seems to be the ScanGauge, which plugs into the onboard diagnostics port on all 1996 and newer cars.

Nothing -- nothing -- will persuade you to drive more slowly than instantaneous evidence that you are throwing away money. Even a four-cylinder econobox will return single-digit fuel economy when floored from a stoplight. At about $175 shipped, it costs the equivalent of several tanks of gas. But it's a lot cheaper than a Prius, and the payoff could come in just a few months if it shaves 20% off a $200 monthly gas bill.  

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Comments

 

TRADE IN YOUR SUV OR PICKUP FOR A 23K HONDA CIVIC HYBRID. YOU MAY HAVE TO WAIT ABOUT 8 WEEKS TO GET ONE BUT 45 MPG IS WORTH IT.

Buy a scotter it will save alot of money. At 290 ,I get 85 mpg not bad for a fat boy.

I have cut my gas bill in half. I slow down for the light to turn green keeping my momentum going until its green.,  I turn my engine off at lights that will take longer than 10 seconds. I mow my yard once every 3 weeks instead of every week, and the most important, I ride my bicycle on weekends and take the bus when ever possible. If you do these things, you will be amazed !! You have to make this whole gas thing as a war against these gas tycoons. I be $%^# if I will ever pay over $4 for to fill a darn lawn mower up. Imagine if everyone helped pitch in and did their part for just one weekend?

Stop driving your SUV - Donate it !

IF YOU CAN'T AFFORD GAS DON'T DRIVE. ITS REAL SIMPLE. $4 GAS IS HERE TO STAY SO GET USED TO IT. YOU THINK GAS IS EXPENSIVE? AUTOMOBILE WAX IS PROBABLY $15-20 A GALLON SO THATS A WASTE AND DRIVING SLOW WILL JUST CAUSE MORE STOP AND GO SO THATS NOT A GOOD WAY... BOTTOM LINE IF YOU CAN'T AFFORD GAS FOR YOUR CAR DON'T DRIVE IT.

DO NOT DRIVE SLOW MY TIME IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN YOU IDIOTS SAVING GAS IF YOU ARE TO CHEAP TO SPEED GET OF THE ROAD

Here are some helpful hints I try to follow to increase my gas dollar: do not speed, start out slow, take your foot off the gas pedal and coast whenever you can, check your tire air pressure weekly, look ahead of you and try to anticipate the flow of traffic-so you can use your momentum to roll up to that redlight, fill your gas tank early in the morning or late at night when it is the coolest to decrease evaporation and get more gas for your money, use a gas credit card that gives you rebates-I use a BP Visa to charge my gas (and everything else) because I get a rebate which is free money as long as I pay off my balance every month, get your gas at Walmart using a Walmart gift card that you purchase which saves a few cents on the gallon, drive with your windows up to decrease wind resistance.  

If you`re going to try the hypermilling to increase your gas mileage, please make sure you use the right hand lane on any highway.  Keeping in the left lane makes you a "left lane Richard (aka Dick)" and will increase the hand gestures (half a peace sign) and honking of the horns of those who want to get by ( and pay much more for their gas bill).  Maybe it`s time to go the route of rationing, which will decrease demand and force the OPEC greedies to reduce prices, or maybe just close the mercantile exchanges where the speculators are pushing up prices by expecting and predicting that crude oil will continue to escalate.  Maybe the tree huggers should take a holiday and allow drilling in Alaska or off the coast, like China is doing 60 miles from Florida!

Remember those ford explorer crashes because of underinflated tires? Well, guess what. Same rule applies to overinflated tires. It's a bad idea!

Let's be more responsible when reporting to the public!

Forget about hypermiling. I solved my problem by getting into a carpool with 3 other people. We all lived within 4 miles of each other and we all worked in the same downtown area. What a pleasure to drive only once every 4 days (with gas cost for each o9f us reduced by 75%) and get "door to door" service. In addition, my company subsidized carpools and charged only a nominal cost to park our cars in the company parking garage.

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