
Originally Posted by
vnx205
It really has nothing to do with imperial or metric. The point is do you really want to know how far you can go on a set amount of fuel or do you want to know how much fuel you need to cover a set distance. Km/litre is just as bad as mpg.
The problem with dealing with percentages is that a high figure for mpg really means a small amount of fuel used, so the same percentage change would mean a smaller saving in fuel than a low mpg figure with the same percentage change.
A 100% improvement on 28mpg will save you about 5 litres every 100 km or about 1000 litres a year.
A 100% improvement on 56 mpg will save about 2.5 litres every 100 km or about 500 litres a year. They are both 100% improvements, but one saves twice as much as the other.
A 100% improvement is a ratio improvement therefore it has no bearing on the actual outcome relative to 100% improvement on a different vehicle. A percentage is proportional only to the base range that it is compared to.
L/km is simply an inversion of km/L and by fixing the denominator at 100km you scale the numerator. At the end of the day it doesn't matter because either method gives you an indication of how fuel efficient the vehicle is the actual difference is that when talking in mpg (or km/L) the larger the numerator the more efficient the fuel consumption where ase in L/km the inverse applies. If we were to talk in terms of percentage increase then this would be only relevant if we compared this weeks fuel consumption with last weeks.
I still think kJ/km would be even better (especially for those with a V8)
MY15 Discovery 4 SE SDV6
Past: 97 D1 Tdi, 03 D2a Td5, 08 Kimberley Kamper, 08 Defender 110 TDCi, 99 Defender 110 300Tdi[/SIZE]
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