MPG: 2015 vs 2019
#1
MPG: 2015 vs 2019
This shocked me. I drive to get good mileage, with lots of coasting and little idling. My son drives like gas is free. He drives in stop and go traffic every day, and he uses drive-up tellers, etc. My 2015 Fit got considerably better mileage than his identical 2015. Since he got a 2019 Fit, he has just surpassed me by .1 MPG. Imagine the mileage I'd be getting with his car. Whatever Honda did to improve mileage, it certainly worked.
#2
any other variables?
IE:
-does he have higher tire pressure?
-is his alignment better?
-does his car carry less weight in it?
-is he using any special fuel / a better brand fuel? (I was always a "use whatever brand gas" kinda guy, but recently started trying out name brand stuff ... SHELL ... and the butt dyno tells me, its better! no mpg change tho, just thought I'd share useless info)
-did he change his commute / driving style?
-did you change anything that has lowered your #s compared to prev months/years?
IE:
-does he have higher tire pressure?
-is his alignment better?
-does his car carry less weight in it?
-is he using any special fuel / a better brand fuel? (I was always a "use whatever brand gas" kinda guy, but recently started trying out name brand stuff ... SHELL ... and the butt dyno tells me, its better! no mpg change tho, just thought I'd share useless info)
-did he change his commute / driving style?
-did you change anything that has lowered your #s compared to prev months/years?
#4
any other variables?
IE:
-does he have higher tire pressure?
-is his alignment better?
-does his car carry less weight in it?
-is he using any special fuel / a better brand fuel? (I was always a "use whatever brand gas" kinda guy, but recently started trying out name brand stuff ... SHELL ... and the butt dyno tells me, its better! no mpg change tho, just thought I'd share useless info)
-did he change his commute / driving style?
-did you change anything that has lowered your #s compared to prev months/years?
IE:
-does he have higher tire pressure?
-is his alignment better?
-does his car carry less weight in it?
-is he using any special fuel / a better brand fuel? (I was always a "use whatever brand gas" kinda guy, but recently started trying out name brand stuff ... SHELL ... and the butt dyno tells me, its better! no mpg change tho, just thought I'd share useless info)
-did he change his commute / driving style?
-did you change anything that has lowered your #s compared to prev months/years?
#5
No Way! He's rough on cars, and he leaves it parking lots all day. Before someone ran into his 2015 and totaled it, he had about 83k on it, while I had about 48k on mine
#8
Sorry, but it really is the car making the difference. When we were both driving 2015 Fits, he averaged 39.8 for about 83k miles, while I averaged 43.7. With his 2019, his MPG is equal to mine. On one trip home from work, someone ran into him while he was stopped, and his car was totaled. On another trip, he blew the two front tires when he hit a large pothole at night in the rain. A couple of weeks ago, he blew another tire in a pothole on a rainy night. And I should let him drive my car for a day? I think not.
#10
He's never caused an accident, so there's no extra fee there. His insurance is higher than mine because his car is newer, and he drives to work every day. Still, MetLife takes good care of us.
#11
This shocked me. I drive to get good mileage, with lots of coasting and little idling. My son drives like gas is free. He drives in stop and go traffic every day, and he uses drive-up tellers, etc. My 2015 Fit got considerably better mileage than his identical 2015. Since he got a 2019 Fit, he has just surpassed me by .1 MPG. Imagine the mileage I'd be getting with his car. Whatever Honda did to improve mileage, it certainly worked.
When was the last time your car was at the dealer? Normally they check for software updates and install the latest if available. If your car has never been or it's been a couple years then it's running on old software. It's probably been updated by engineering more than a couple times since 2015
#12
I’ve been driving my 2019 and with 3300 miles I’ve been averaging 41.1 mpg with an indicated 44.5 mpg on the display. I drive very conservatively just to get a baseline for the car. Oil life is only at 70% so I’ll hit the 5K mark for 1st oil change well before the oil life goes to 15%
#13
When was the last time your car was at the dealer? Normally they check for software updates and install the latest if available. If your car has never been or it's been a couple years then it's running on old software. It's probably been updated by engineering more than a couple times since 2015
Are these MPG ratings from the display or hand calculated?
I would think the new models would be heavier as they received more sound deadening and thicker windshield glass, so that should be a gas penalty.
#14
When was the last time your car was at the dealer? Normally they check for software updates and install the latest if available. If your car has never been or it's been a couple years then it's running on old software. It's probably been updated by engineering more than a couple times since 2015
I'm not complaining about averaging 43 MPG. Unless I get a notice from Honda about a free service, I'm staying away from the dealer. My local dealer is a money vacuum.
#16
Funny you should mention that. My car is loaded with Dynamat, and it made quite a difference in the noise level. I think I added three boxes at 15 lb per box.
#17
60 mpg
I drove 40 - 45 MPH for 17 miles yesterday behind a slow truck, and I averaged 60.0 MPH by the time the truck turned off. Not bad. Of course, that's according to the dash display, but it's the highest reading I've averaged for a distance. I covered the remaining 13 miles and averaged 55.0 MPG for the whole trip. Coming home on the Interstate at 65 - 70 MPH, I averaged 42 MPG. I made the right decision buying this car. : )