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17-06-2006, 10:32 PM | #1 | ||
Ferret
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Wodonga, Victoria
Posts: 51
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Well, after having just done a trip to Bendigo and back and averaging 7l/100km from our AU3 Futura (81,000km up, two adults and a baby, assorted gear for a weekend) and being thoroughly impressed with the car and economy, I'm wondering why the same car when driven around town like petrol is $50 a litre, struggles to reach 400km to a tank, i.e. averages about 16-17l/100km? any ideas? I've reset the ECU, replaced plugs, spoken nicely to the car but nothing seems to make a difference. Help!
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17-06-2006, 10:46 PM | #2 | ||
Fantastic Plastic
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Mars most of the time
Posts: 2,019
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Your allways gonna get better economy on long trips , your not on and off the brake and gas pedal as much . What your describing sounds about adverage, about the same economy as i get in the city , allthough i haven't been on a long trip yet to see how low i can get it ;) .
For this model car and with the price of fuel , about all you can do to improve your economy a bit more maybe is either get it put on gas ! ..lol , or , lean off the accelerator a bit more when taking off / take off slower / don't cruise around in 3rd ( use 4th / in auto), try to judge the traffic ahead and try to avoid stoping ( like if you see red traffic lights coming on in the distance , try to slow down a de-accelerate before getting to them , hoping by the time you nearlly reach them they are green again, thus keeping the car cruising along smoothly at a sorta constant speed . Oh , you could go for something like an edit which would sort the air/fuel mixture ratio out more , depends how much the economy really bothers you. Allthough Imo I wouldn't expect a great difference in economy from an edit anyway, this is really more of a performance mod / which with the power gains you would probably just burn more fuel again anyway ..lol
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------------------------------------------------------------ :eclipsee_ Last edited by XR6-VCT-2000; 17-06-2006 at 10:58 PM. |
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19-06-2006, 04:18 PM | #3 | |||
Ripping it up
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 664
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lol thats how i drive in the city now, and i just barely crack 400. highway is easy 800. that |
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19-06-2006, 05:13 PM | #4 | |||
Fantastic Plastic
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Mars most of the time
Posts: 2,019
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Quote:
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18-06-2006, 02:27 AM | #5 | |||
Miami Pilot
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: ACT
Posts: 21,704
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Quote:
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The Hammer: FG GTE | 376rwkw | 1/4 mile 11.793 @ 119.75mph 1.733 60' (4408lb) 1 of 60 FG MK1 335 GTEs (1 of 118 FG Mk 1 & 2 335 GTEs). Mods: Tune, HSD/ShockWorks, black GT335 19” staggered replicas with 245 & 275/35/19 Michelin Pilot sport 5s Daily: BF2 Fairmont Ghia I6 ZF, machine face GT335 19” staggered Replicas with 245s and 275s, Bilsteins & Kings FPV 335 build stats: <click here> Ford Performance Club ACT |
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18-06-2006, 08:09 AM | #6 | ||
Living the dream
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: NSW
Posts: 1,795
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Highway driving involves a more constant, low rev cruising style of driving, which keeps fuel consumption down, as the engine doesnt have to work like it does when accelerating, stopping and starting during city driving. As JC said, its a combination of the engine running rich to protect itself, and the fact that building up momentum from standstill costs energy - energy costs fuel.
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18-06-2006, 08:42 AM | #7 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 581
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All cars get pad knock to a degree, this is a term used for the slight movt. a rotor does due to wheel bearing play and rotor distortion. In city brakes are used more often and pads sit extremely close and pad knock is not so much of an issue. If your pads are stiff in their housings due to buildups etc then they may not be withdrawing from the rotor fully and causing drag. Is your car hard to roll in this situation? Pad knock on country drives has pads way and in extreme cases can reduce brake pedal due to excessive pad withdrawal. This whole issue is not overly common but enough that you should not discount it and check your pads aren't binding in the city.
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18-06-2006, 09:47 AM | #8 | ||
Ferret
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Wodonga, Victoria
Posts: 51
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The car is driven very economically around town (my wife and I certainly don't hoon), and yes they are short trips because Wodonga's not all that big! The point of my post is that the car is incredibly economical on the highway (obviously due to the nature of highway driving) but delivers really crap economy around town, much worse than I would expect and worse than others have reported on this forum in other posts. I went around to all of the BA-BF Falcons at work recently checking their average figures as reported in their trip computers, they ranged from 8.9 to 13.5 l/100km. I don't believe that 17l/100km is average for a sedately driven AU3. I do understand though that a cold car will use more fuel than one at operating temperature, so the question is do I have a dodgy thermostat that leaks past, or do I have a dodgy temperature sensor, or MAP sensor or any other sensor? It does take a while to warm up and when it does it sits just below the 'O' on 'NORMAL'. Is there any point taking it to an injection specialist to have it sussed out, or do I just sell it and buy something that doesn't cost a fortune to run?
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18-06-2006, 05:58 PM | #9 | ||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: FoMoCo
Posts: 3,441
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& the car has only just reached operating temperation when I reach a multi level carpark @ work. It gets far better economy on a trip.
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FGX XR6 Lightning Strike Sedan BA XR6 Mk II Shockwave Sedan - Now Sold - gone but not forgotten mods: 20% under drive, Pacemaker Comps 4495' (ceramic coated) , 3' Metal Cat, XR6T exhaust - twin 3' tips, F6 CAI, K&N panel filter, PWR trans cooler, customed tuned by Heinrich Performance Tuning HPT 183.7rwkw. Quote:
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18-06-2006, 09:01 PM | #10 | |||
www.TUFFCARPARTS.com
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 5,221
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Like you, we were also thinking about trading, but when you factor in the poor resale of the falcons in general, as well as the changeover costs as well as the increased price of the new car, it works out to be a lot of money to save a few bucks a week on fuel....and then like others have said, you then lose the space, comfort, and effortless power that the AU has to offer :voldar02: |
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18-06-2006, 02:39 PM | #11 | |||
Was V6corp
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Canberra
Posts: 537
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Quote:
Umm that has nothing to do with fuel ???? :
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Car: 99 AU I Forte Sedan Colour: Blue Engine Mods: K&N Pod in a XR8 Pod Box; Performace fuel pump; 2 1/2" Exhaust Planned Engine Mods: ; Extractors; Tickford CAI; Twin Mufflers; Shift Kit; Hi-Stall; Cam; ECU Flash Bling Mods: Tinted Windows; JVC CD/DVD HU Planned Bling Mods: TS50 Front; High Series bonnet; Rebel Skirts and Rear Bar; SL Springs; Clear Side Indicators; Rear Spolier; Mags |
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18-06-2006, 05:30 PM | #12 | ||
Winter all year round
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Sydney
Posts: 671
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The AU's were fitted with a thermostat that leaks past via a small hole, to gradually warm up the coolant in the radiator. Otherwise when the thermostat opens up the hot coolant floods the radiator and the plastic side tanks have a tendancy to split. I've had this happen to me (mines an AUII) it was repaired under warranty and the hole added to the thermostat. I'm sure the AUIII had the hole from factory. My AU sits on the same temperature as yours.
Since then it does take longer to warm up which doesn't help on fuel consumption on short trips. My AUII 4.0L Auto gets approx 14-15L/100km around town, today I got an impressive 6.6L/100km on a trip to wollongong which was pure freeway driving, my Mazda 6 2.3L four banger gets 7.8L/100km on the same trip. The AU consumption is miles infront of the BA's, I owned a BA also & on the same freeway trip to wollongong the best I could get was 11.5L/100km, don't ask what to town figure was (bloody ridiculous, that's why i don't own it anymore). All figures are "at pump" calculated figures (trip computers are inacurate) and I drive casually. In regards to selling the AU, well thats the best consumption you'll get in a falcon, I don't think there is anything wrong with it. If it's too expensive to run then you'll have to get a 4 cyl to feel lighter on the wallet. But loose the space and power of the falcon.
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Some people drive sports cars on the weekend....I drive my AU! It's not what you drive...it's how you enjoy it. Recommend trading with Mechan1k, Offyaguts, EDMONTY, PhantomXR8, HOTC2R, Partie & JC Last edited by Au2falcons; 18-06-2006 at 05:53 PM. |
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19-06-2006, 03:14 PM | #13 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 581
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Quote:
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18-06-2006, 05:46 PM | #14 | ||
_Oo===oO_
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Canberra
Posts: 1,471
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Bingo Au2falcons has said it in one. You trade a engine warm up rate for preserving the radiator. AUIII's had that setup standard, so hence the increase in fuel consumption for very short trips.
As far as trading the AU in on a smaller car, will the price of the small car purchase likely offset any gain in fuel savings?
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19-06-2006, 03:08 PM | #15 | ||
Fantastic Plastic
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Mars most of the time
Posts: 2,019
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lol , i originally got the shock horror off my life when i realised how fuel thirsty the vct is , but for how it handles / the comfort / power / its all worth it in the end ;) . Depends how much you appreciate driving nice cars i suppose . No way would i give up this fuel pig for the KA laser i was driving around recentlly ..lol ( $20 in the laser lasted a week ! ..lol , but was a horror to drive !)
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19-06-2006, 10:30 PM | #16 | ||
Viper FG XR6 Turbo
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 858
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I find the AU I6 can be quiet economical if driven easy, by letting the torque and gears do the work. but as soon as you start putting the foot down, thats when it starts drinking
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