How long should a full tank last?

Soldato
Joined
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Wales
Hi guys,
Had my first car an 03 1.2 SEAT Ibiza for about 3 weeks now loving it I am. :D
Just wanted to check really roughly how long a full tank should last, I put £45 in it the Wednesday before last and sure enough 8 days later my fuel light came on and I put another full tank of fuel in. :p
During those 8 days I did 210 miles in the car and just wanted to check this is about right :)
Cheers
 
This is a basic maths concept.

Look in the manual and see how big the tank is, then look up mpg, and take about 20% off. then work it out :p

kd
 
First few weeks of my first car I avg'd crazy low MPG's due to having just learnt/passed in a Diesel. Got in a Petrol for the first time and found myself not changing gear no where near enough at first, Aswell as over-revving it to avoid stalling it lol, Was drinking it :D
 
What kind of driving are you doing, sounds low?
A mix of town and dual carriageway driving :)
Almost always short trips.
that's 28mpg, so if it was town driving that could explain it, otherwise i'd expect at least 35mpg

Well according to the MPG calculators I have been looking at I am getting around 22/23 MPG - My tank has a capacity of 45 litres
 
A mix of town and dual carriageway driving :)
Almost always short trips.


Well according to the MPG calculators I have been looking at I am getting around 22/23 MPG - My tank has a capacity of 45 litres

Chives if you've put in £45 that works out as say 35 litres. If you've done 210 miles on 35 litres that's about 28mpg.

You should be able to get quite a bit more out of that, it'll just be your driving style / cold weather short trips.
 
If your fuel tank is 45 litres and you put £45 in then you didn't fill the tank did you, unless you live in a secret place where petrol is £1 a litre.

I remember those days, so long ago now :(
 
Keep a log like this..

Fill tank, zero mile counter.
When light comes on, fill tank and note how much fuel goes in (in litres) and how many miles you're on.
zero mile counter.


Repeat this a few times and you'll have a good basis to work on the actual MPG.

When was it last serviced?

The following will be good for the car and potentially improve MPG

Oil ~£25
Oil filter ~£6
Air filter ~£6
Spark plugs ~£10
 
If your fuel tank is 45 litres and you put £45 in then you didn't fill the tank did you, unless you live in a secret place where petrol is £1 a litre.

I remember those days, so long ago now :(
Well I filled it soon after the fuel light came on.
Or maybe it wasn't completely empty before filling..
This, likely there was some fuel left in it.
Keep a log like this..

Fill tank, zero mile counter.
When light comes on, fill tank and note how much fuel goes in (in litres) and how many miles you're on.
zero mile counter.


Repeat this a few times and you'll have a good basis to work on the actual MPG.

When was it last serviced?

The following will be good for the car and potentially improve MPG

Oil ~£25
Oil filter ~£6
Air filter ~£6
Spark plugs ~£10

Ok will start recording that information :)
It last had a service in January of this year, is due another service along with its MOT this coming January.
 
Also, if you're only doing short journeys at this time of the year, it will take a further MPG hit as it can't get up to temperature.
 
I get 28mpg from my 2.4 Accord, half and half town and dual carriageway driving so I'd personally be very disappointed if I got that from a 1.2?
 
Also, if you're only doing short journeys at this time of the year, it will take a further MPG hit as it can't get up to temperature.
Mostly is short journeys :)
I get 28mpg from my 2.4 Accord, half and half town and dual carriageway driving so I'd personally be very disappointed if I got that from a 1.2?

Well this is how my week days work :
Leave at 8 for school which is 2 miles away, around 20 mins of mostly stop start traffic before I arrive.
Often go out for lunch at 1 to Tesco which is around 2 miles away so a 4 mile round trip which takes between 5-10 minutes each way :)
Then go home between 1:30-4 which is another 2 miles back and this takes 5 minutes
In the evenings and on the weekends then it can be used any time, almost always short journeys though.
 
Sounds about right. A lot of people talk on here about 'town' driving and getting ~30mpg. I'd be interested what they think town driving is to achieve that. Down here it's 10mph average speeds and frustration.

Since the winter has started to hit, my average speed has dropped from 22mph to 14mph, and consumption from 29mpg to 23mpg. Twice as many cars on the road (less people cycling and for some reason it seems kids aren't allowed to walk to school anymore!?) and car only just gets up to temp before I reach my destination.
 
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