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In article <A%7Il.106178$%k2.26968@newsfe07.iad>,
Greg Campbell <nospam@null.net> wrote: > It's a shame that hypermiling gets such bad press. More correctly, hyperMILERS are responsible for the bad press. You know who practices regular "hypermiling"? Selfish assholes. |
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"Tegger" <invalid@invalid.inv> wrote in message
news:Xns9BF6C67C2B4B4tegger@208.90.168.18... > Your post makes me think of somebody trying to see just how > long he could wear the itchiest wool socks he could find without > scratching even once. No thanks. Exactly the same feeling I am getting. And for what reason person can torture themselves? It is for the global warming and to save Mother Earth? :-) Probably not... It is probably to save 5-6 dollars when refueling the tank and spend it later on a prematurely blown tires or repair and medical bills after a crash on slippery road after rain... BTW - is there any reason at all for running Civic on mid grade gas? This engine was designed to run on regular, so there is no knoking which can be avoided using higher octane gasoline... |
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I keep a mile log of each fill up for my 2004 VP.
Pretty much 34 mpg whole year over last three years- includes winte/summer ethanol mixes and city/highway/mountain driving. On a summer road trip I might get 42. I have to watch out for single-fillup numbers. I just let the gas pump shut off when it does. Sometimes it might shut off early or late, skewing the single tank number by up to a gallon wither way. It might take three fillups to average out. |
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On 4/24/09 9:02 AM, in article gsrvcr.1sk.0@poczta.onet.pl, "Pszemol" <Pszemol@PolBox.com> wrote: > > BTW - is there any reason at all for running Civic on mid grade gas? > This engine was designed to run on regular, so there is no knoking > which can be avoided using higher octane gasoline... > They all have knock sensors that will make any knocking immediately disappear, probably before you even notice that its doing it, regardless of what gas you use vs. what was actually spec'd for the car. There was some traffic from Honda several years ago that indicated some of the cars were actually designed for premium fuel and would give better mileage and performance if it is used, but rated for regular and depended on the knock sensor to make it all work. The way to find out if yours is one of those is to run several tanks of higher octane fuel in it. If the mileage is consistently better then you can benefit from it. If it isn't, stick with regular. AFAIK, all the Civics are designed for regular. |
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Pszemol wrote:
> "Tegger" <invalid@invalid.inv> wrote in message >> Your post makes me think of somebody trying to see just how >> long he could wear the itchiest wool socks he could find without >> scratching even once. No thanks. LOL Sheesh guys, it's not that horrible! ![]() With a manual transmission, you DO get to apply the gas. Peak efficiency with a fixed valve timing engine generally occurs in the middle RPM range, at 30~70% of full throttle. This gives you more than enough power to hold your own vs. average traffic. Driving the 40MPH multi-lane streets, I short shift with moderate throttle, and work up to a 'good shove in 4th' that equates to ~45mph. From there, it's all about second guessing any upcoming lights. If I'm likely to catch a red light, I'll slow (or occasionally speed up a little!) so as to maximize the odds of it being green when I arrive. This has more to do with paying attention than putting along at absurdly slow speeds. > And for what reason person can torture themselves? :P Oh, dear! You've been watching those poor OCD afflicted hypermiler fools on the news. I try not to torture myself, my car, or anyone else on the road. > It is for the global warming and to save Mother Earth? :-) > Probably not... Mother Earth was screwed the day we made fire. ![]() > It is probably to save 5-6 dollars when refueling the tank > and spend it later on a prematurely blown tires or repair > and medical bills after a crash on slippery road after rain... I'm getting ~50+% better mileage than several people I know who also own 4th gen. Accords. At 4$ a gallon, the savings was about $20 a tank. Why prematurely blown tires? Higher pressure results in less heating and lower operating temperatures. As mentioned, my tires wear more evenly at 36~38PSI than at the factory suggested pressure. Tire life is enhanced. And why on earth does everyone assume that 'over' inflated tires have no grip in the rain? = ![]() -Moo |
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E. Meyer wrote:
> > > On 4/24/09 9:02 AM, in article gsrvcr.1sk.0@poczta.onet.pl, "Pszemol" > <Pszemol@PolBox.com> wrote: > >> BTW - is there any reason at all for running Civic on mid grade gas? >> This engine was designed to run on regular, so there is no knoking >> which can be avoided using higher octane gasoline... >> > > They all have knock sensors that will make any knocking immediately > disappear, probably before you even notice that its doing it, regardless of > what gas you use vs. what was actually spec'd for the car. > > There was some traffic from Honda several years ago that indicated some of > the cars were actually designed for premium fuel and would give better > mileage and performance if it is used, but rated for regular and depended on > the knock sensor to make it all work. > > The way to find out if yours is one of those is to run several tanks of > higher octane fuel in it. If the mileage is consistently better then you > can benefit from it. If it isn't, stick with regular. AFAIK, all the > Civics are designed for regular. > Believe me, I started using midgrade reluctantly. This car has freakishly high gearing, and I first started using it so I'd be less likely to stall it starting out in first on hills. (And no, I'm no newbie to standard transmissions. Between the tall gearing and the idle being set at 600, the car really is touchy.) It worked, and I also noticed a 10% increase in economy. Since midgrade gas was/is only about 5% more expensive, it made sense to keep using it. The thing about knock sensors is they only stop knocking - they don't increase performance. In fact, they are there so the engine can run a more advanced timing curve when you use higher octane gas. This Civic is the only car I've had that got better MPG on midgrade. |
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Leftie <No@Thanks.net> wrote in news:d8oIl.35465$gC1.24884@newsfe19.iad:
> E. Meyer wrote: >> >> >> On 4/24/09 9:02 AM, in article gsrvcr.1sk.0@poczta.onet.pl, "Pszemol" >> <Pszemol@PolBox.com> wrote: >> >>> BTW - is there any reason at all for running Civic on mid grade gas? >>> This engine was designed to run on regular, so there is no knoking >>> which can be avoided using higher octane gasoline... >>> >> >> They all have knock sensors that will make any knocking immediately >> disappear, probably before you even notice that its doing it, >> regardless of what gas you use vs. what was actually spec'd for the >> car. >> >> There was some traffic from Honda several years ago that indicated >> some of the cars were actually designed for premium fuel and would >> give better mileage and performance if it is used, but rated for >> regular and depended on the knock sensor to make it all work. >> >> The way to find out if yours is one of those is to run several tanks >> of higher octane fuel in it. If the mileage is consistently better >> then you can benefit from it. If it isn't, stick with regular. >> AFAIK, all the Civics are designed for regular. >> > > Believe me, I started using midgrade reluctantly. This car has > freakishly high gearing, and I first started using it so I'd be less > likely to stall it starting out in first on hills. (And no, I'm no > newbie to standard transmissions. Between the tall gearing and the > idle being set at 600, the car really is touchy.) It worked, and I > also noticed a 10% increase in economy. Since midgrade gas was/is only > about 5% more expensive, it made sense to keep using it. The thing > about knock sensors is they only stop knocking - they don't increase > performance. In fact, they are there so the engine can run a more > advanced timing curve when you use higher octane gas. This Civic is > the only car I've had that got better MPG on midgrade. Your car has identical low gearing and final drive to all other Civics prior to it. But your 4th and 5th are in fact higher than they used to be, probably to help improve Honda's CAFE numbers. (I do very much wish _my_ 4th and 5th were higher than they are...) If you DON'T have the D15Z1 engine, no-load idle of 600rpm is too low. Pump octanes have zero effect on whether an engine is more or less easily stalled at lights. If there is any effect at all, it's a perceived one, not an actual one. Boosting the octane rating of gasoline serves only one purpose: to prevent the tendency of a fuel/air mix to self-combust all at once in the absence of a controlled flame front. Self-combustion is what's known as "knocking". On its own, higher octanes have no other meaningful effect on engine performance. Engine control systems are only capable of increasing performance with higher octanes if they are designed to do so. Your Civic's is not. The Civic is designed for 87 pump octane. Its engine management is not capable of advancing timing past designed-in limits that do not take higher octanes into account, but can only /retard/ timing if knocking is sensed. Your knock sensor is intended to decrease the tendency to knock, not /specifically/ to prevent engine damage, but to decrease emissions of nitric oxide (NO) while still maintaining the best power and mileage that can be achieved without engine damage. I've conducted my own fairly extensive tests of different octanes. Given that testing of any meaningful length of time necessarily involves seasonal temperature changes, my results were inconclusive. If anything, I got a very slight /reduction/ in mileage with 91 pump octane versus 87. -- Tegger The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
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In article <d8oIl.35465$gC1.24884@newsfe19.iad>, Leftie <No@Thanks.net>
wrote: > The thing about knock > sensors is they only stop knocking - they don't increase performance. In > fact, they are there so the engine can run a more advanced timing curve > when you use higher octane gas. No, that's not why they're there. Knock sensors are there so that when you use a gasoline that does NOT have the anti-knock properties that are called for in the gasoline--let's say you used a lower octane gas--then the engine doesn't detonate. But when the engine is already designed for 87 octane fuel, and if you're using a proper 87 octane fuel (not piss water), then the knock sensors don't come into play at all. (I am ignoring the effects of age and bad maintenance causing carbon buildup inside the combustion chamber, which would lead to knocking with 87 octane fuel, which means that a higher octane fuel will help. Rather, I am discussing a properly maintained and clean engine.) Again, the knock sensors don't come into play at all. You can put all the higher octane gas you want in, and the knock sensors don't move the timing around to keep the engine just at the point of knock. No, the knock sensing system is designed to work with fuels lower than what the engine was designed for. The system was NOT designed to advance timing in the presence of higher octane fuels that are beyond the octane rating specified by the engineers. |
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Elmo P. Shagnasty wrote:
> In article <d8oIl.35465$gC1.24884@newsfe19.iad>, Leftie <No@Thanks.net> > wrote: > >> The thing about knock >> sensors is they only stop knocking - they don't increase performance. In >> fact, they are there so the engine can run a more advanced timing curve >> when you use higher octane gas. > > No, that's not why they're there. > > Knock sensors are there so that when you use a gasoline that does NOT > have the anti-knock properties that are called for in the > gasoline--let's say you used a lower octane gas--then the engine doesn't > detonate. > > But when the engine is already designed for 87 octane fuel, and if > you're using a proper 87 octane fuel (not piss water), then the knock > sensors don't come into play at all. (I am ignoring the effects of age > and bad maintenance causing carbon buildup inside the combustion > chamber, which would lead to knocking with 87 octane fuel, which means > that a higher octane fuel will help. Rather, I am discussing a properly > maintained and clean engine.) > > Again, the knock sensors don't come into play at all. You can put all > the higher octane gas you want in, and the knock sensors don't move the > timing around to keep the engine just at the point of knock. No, the > knock sensing system is designed to work with fuels lower than what the > engine was designed for. The system was NOT designed to advance timing > in the presence of higher octane fuels that are beyond the octane rating > specified by the engineers. well, the truth is between the two of you. knock sensors allow the motor to run the most advanced curve it can without knock, regardless of fuel. at the edge of the envelope, knock can vary tank to tank, rainy days, vs. non-rainy days, cold, hot, etc. if you can figure out where the knock point is, you can move timing accordingly. if you don't know, you just have to set it back, and leave a safety margin. that means very slightly less power and/or fuel economy. in this day and age of powerful engine computers, there's no reason not to pursue that marginal improvement. |
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Tegger wrote:
> Leftie <No@Thanks.net> wrote in news:d8oIl.35465$gC1.24884@newsfe19.iad: > >> E. Meyer wrote: >>> >>> On 4/24/09 9:02 AM, in article gsrvcr.1sk.0@poczta.onet.pl, "Pszemol" >>> <Pszemol@PolBox.com> wrote: >>> >>>> BTW - is there any reason at all for running Civic on mid grade gas? >>>> This engine was designed to run on regular, so there is no knoking >>>> which can be avoided using higher octane gasoline... >>>> >>> They all have knock sensors that will make any knocking immediately >>> disappear, probably before you even notice that its doing it, >>> regardless of what gas you use vs. what was actually spec'd for the >>> car. >>> >>> There was some traffic from Honda several years ago that indicated >>> some of the cars were actually designed for premium fuel and would >>> give better mileage and performance if it is used, but rated for >>> regular and depended on the knock sensor to make it all work. >>> >>> The way to find out if yours is one of those is to run several tanks >>> of higher octane fuel in it. If the mileage is consistently better >>> then you can benefit from it. If it isn't, stick with regular. >>> AFAIK, all the Civics are designed for regular. >>> >> Believe me, I started using midgrade reluctantly. This car has >> freakishly high gearing, and I first started using it so I'd be less >> likely to stall it starting out in first on hills. (And no, I'm no >> newbie to standard transmissions. Between the tall gearing and the >> idle being set at 600, the car really is touchy.) It worked, and I >> also noticed a 10% increase in economy. Since midgrade gas was/is only >> about 5% more expensive, it made sense to keep using it. The thing >> about knock sensors is they only stop knocking - they don't increase >> performance. In fact, they are there so the engine can run a more >> advanced timing curve when you use higher octane gas. This Civic is >> the only car I've had that got better MPG on midgrade. > > > > > > Your car has identical low gearing and final drive to all other Civics > prior to it. But your 4th and 5th are in fact higher than they used to > be, probably to help improve Honda's CAFE numbers. > (I do very much wish _my_ 4th and 5th were higher than they are...) > > If you DON'T have the D15Z1 engine, no-load idle of 600rpm is too low. > > Pump octanes have zero effect on whether an engine is more or less > easily stalled at lights. If there is any effect at all, it's a > perceived one, not an actual one. > > Boosting the octane rating of gasoline serves only one purpose: to > prevent the tendency of a fuel/air mix to self-combust all at once in > the absence of a controlled flame front. Self-combustion is what's known > as "knocking". On its own, higher octanes have no other meaningful > effect on engine performance. > > Engine control systems are only capable of increasing performance with > higher octanes if they are designed to do so. Your Civic's is not. The > Civic is designed for 87 pump octane. Its engine management is not > capable of advancing timing past designed-in limits that do not take > higher octanes into account, but can only /retard/ timing if knocking is > sensed. > > Your knock sensor is intended to decrease the tendency to knock, not > /specifically/ to prevent engine damage, but to decrease emissions of > nitric oxide (NO) while still maintaining the best power and mileage > that can be achieved without engine damage. > > I've conducted my own fairly extensive tests of different octanes. Given > that testing of any meaningful length of time necessarily involves > seasonal temperature changes, my results were inconclusive. If anything, > I got a very slight /reduction/ in mileage with 91 pump octane versus > 87. > > > Interesting. A few points: I had a problem with stalling when starting off going up inclines, not at lights. That has improved, possibly just from the midgrade cleaning the injectors. As for the increase in fuel economy, that's real. And there is a white line across my tach right at about 600 RPM; it's obviously there to tell owners that the low idle is intentional. What's the D15Z1 engine? I suspect I may have it. Finally, I wouldn't mind having two overdrives (4th and 5th) but *third* is also way too tall. Trying to accelerate up a hill in third, even after revving the bejesus out of it in second, is discouraging. My 91Hp series one Si would kick this car''s 126hp ass on the dragstrip. Still, as long as it keeps getting 40+mpg in Summer, I'll live with it. |
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