My RX8 most likely about 1 hour...![]()
According to a lot of people on Kent roads 'the slower you go the less fuel you use' so I suspect the answer would be pretty close to 'for ever'.
Andi.
Given it uses such a tiny amount of fuel when standstill and idling - it does beg the question if Start/Stop systems actually really do give you any kind of economy increase.
Given it uses such a tiny amount of fuel when standstill and idling - it does beg the question if Start/Stop systems actually really do give you any kind of economy increase.
I read that on everyday hatchbacks, these systems can add around 5MPG to the "official" MPG figure. I'd be interested to know how long the average stop is on the official test. Where I live there are lots of traffic lights, but the intervals are quite short so it tends to be lots of little stops rather than a few long stops. I'm sure this would reduce the effectiveness of a stop-start system.
Given it uses such a tiny amount of fuel when standstill and idling - it does beg the question if Start/Stop systems actually really do give you any kind of economy increase.
I read that on everyday hatchbacks, these systems can add around 5MPG to the "official" MPG figure. I'd be interested to know how long the average stop is on the official test. Where I live there are lots of traffic lights, but the intervals are quite short so it tends to be lots of little stops rather than a few long stops. I'm sure this would reduce the effectiveness of a stop-start system.
Well in real day terms, commuting within London (8.5 miles each way) the start/stop takes my 18.0 mpg average to 20.0 mpg. Based on the balance of 2 more mpg and the stress on components, the first thing I do when I get in the car is turn the start/stop off.
They say that any stop lasting more than 4s saves you fuel with start/stop, not sure how much truth there is in that?
If the system doesn't use the starter motor how is the engine restarted?