RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
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Geek on the Hill
So the "winter blend" gasoline has started flowing, and predictably, the MPG in my newest car (2012 Kia Soul) dropped by 8.62 percent, from an average of 34.8 MPG to 31.8.
I had to make a long-ish trip today, and as it happens, I was near a gas station that sells corn-free premium when I was down to a little over 1/4 tank. So I filled up on the corn-free, making for a tank mix of 3/4 corn-free 91-octane to 1/4 corn-laced 87-octane. Then I started the trip home, a long trip on a winding, hilly mountain road that passes through a couple of sleepy villages -- not exactly a hypermiler's paradise.
By the time I got home, the car's computer was reading an average MPG of 42.5 MPG on the ethanol-free premium, compared to 31.8 on the "winter blend" corn-laced regular, or an improvement of 33.65 percent.
Cost-wise, given the above figures and the current prices, the corn-free still costs about $0.008 more per mile than the corn-laced. On the other hand, the car performed better (for example, hills that I usually take in third, I could take in fourth); and assuming a reserve of about a gallon, the corn-free also adds about 118 miles range per tank of gas.
I'll probably fill up with 91-octane corn-laced next time so I can get a fairer comparison. The 33.65 percent improvement in MPG is comparing the highest (and only, around here) grade of corn-free with the lowest grade of corn-laced.
Rich
I had to make a long-ish trip today, and as it happens, I was near a gas station that sells corn-free premium when I was down to a little over 1/4 tank. So I filled up on the corn-free, making for a tank mix of 3/4 corn-free 91-octane to 1/4 corn-laced 87-octane. Then I started the trip home, a long trip on a winding, hilly mountain road that passes through a couple of sleepy villages -- not exactly a hypermiler's paradise.
By the time I got home, the car's computer was reading an average MPG of 42.5 MPG on the ethanol-free premium, compared to 31.8 on the "winter blend" corn-laced regular, or an improvement of 33.65 percent.
Cost-wise, given the above figures and the current prices, the corn-free still costs about $0.008 more per mile than the corn-laced. On the other hand, the car performed better (for example, hills that I usually take in third, I could take in fourth); and assuming a reserve of about a gallon, the corn-free also adds about 118 miles range per tank of gas.
I'll probably fill up with 91-octane corn-laced next time so I can get a fairer comparison. The 33.65 percent improvement in MPG is comparing the highest (and only, around here) grade of corn-free with the lowest grade of corn-laced.
Rich
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