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Thread: MPG vs L/100k

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    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)
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    Quote Originally Posted by dm_td5 View Post
    I still think kJ/km would be even better (especially for those with a V8)
    If you mean you measure the energy input required to cover a set distance, then I would agree with you because it is using the same logic of measuring fuel (or energy) used over a set distance. After all it is a fuel consumption figure, so it should be stated as an amount of fuel (or energy) consumed over a set distance.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dm_td5 View Post
    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.
    My point exactly. It's a bit like some obscure sport claiming they are the fastest growing sport in Australia. Cross-country tiddlywinks could probably quite correctly claim they were the fastest growing sport because last month there was one person competing and now there are two, a 100% growth.

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    Hi all, you could use the following fuel economy calculator and get the figures in MPG, Litres per 100 or kms per litre.

    http://www.dropbears.com/u/utilities...fficiency.html

    Greg

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    Quote Originally Posted by ladas View Post

    If you are running at 28 mpg which equals 10.0906 l/100km

    If you had a 100% improvement on 28 mpg, that would mean

    14 mpg, which is 20.1811 l/km a saving of 10.0905 l/100km (not 5 ltrs as you state)

    If you were running at 56 mpg which equals 5.043 l/100km

    A 100% improvement would mean 112 mpg which equals 2.5226 l/100km

    Which leave you with a saving of 2.5204 l/100km

    ......

    Sorry cock but a 10,20,30,40,50, 75, 100% improvement is 10,20,30,40,50, 75, 100% improvement in any language
    I was just trying to make the maths simple by using 100%.
    By the way a 100% improvement on 28 mpg is 56 mpg, (not 14 mpg as you state)
    I would have though that it was more important to know the actual change in consumption rather than the percentage. After all as you point out yourself, it depends on what it is a percentage of. That was one of the points I was trying to make.

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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    I was just trying to make the maths simple by using 100%.
    By the way a 100% improvement on 28 mpg is 56 mpg, (not 14 mpg as you state)
    I would have though that it was more important to know the actual change in consumption rather than the percentage. After all as you point out yourself, it depends on what it is a percentage of. That was one of the points I was trying to make.
    Yes I see your point - and sorry yes 100% on 28 is 56 - blonde moment

    But a gpm improvement is exactly the same as a l/100km

    Oh bugger it I give up

  7. #17
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    Whether the better way of expressing it is litre/km or km/litre depends on whether you are trying to work out how much fuel you need to get from A to B or trying to work out whether you can get from A to B on one tank.
    With the ready availability of pocket calculators, the practical difference is zero - the only advantage of either method is that most people can multiply in their head easier than they can divide.
    (Since you are buying fuel in litres, if you have a speedo in km, which is everyone except early Series owners, miles don't come into it, and /100km is a bit silly as well).

    As I said above - there is no real advantage to either, it is simply that some people are more familiar with what they grew up with. For example, I grew up with the idea that a reasonable fuel consumption figure is 30mpg (9.42l/100km), this being the sort of figure you got from a Holden (48/215) or my father's Swift, and consequently I use it as a yardstick to this day, so I have to convert either way to compare. But I don't think that either method is inherently better, although I do think the 100 is silly - it is there only so you deal with whole numbers, and the simpler way would be to just use km/l. The argument over whether a smaller number is better or a higher number is better simply depends on whether you are playing golf or cricket - and seeing that we were used to having a higher number as better from the start of motoring, and the rest of the world still works that way, it is simply a change to be different foisted on us by the metric conversion board.

    John
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    Quote Originally Posted by JDNSW View Post
    Whether the better way of expressing it is litre/km or km/litre depends on whether you are trying to work out how much fuel you need to get from A to B or trying to work out whether you can get from A to B on one tank.
    That's right. I would have thought that the former situation is more common in the real world.
    Quote Originally Posted by JDNSW View Post
    the only advantage of either method is that most people can multiply in their head easier than they can divide.
    Exactly! Working out L/100k is a simple multiplication. eg if you have a 15,000 km trip planned and you use 11 L/100km just multiply the two figures and knock a couple of 0s if the end. You have to budget for 1650 litres.
    Quote Originally Posted by JDNSW View Post
    As I said above - there is no real advantage to either, it is simply that some people are more familiar with what they grew up with. For example, I grew up with the idea that a reasonable fuel consumption figure is 30mpg (9.42l/100km), this being the sort of figure you got from a Holden (48/215) or my father's Swift, and consequently I use it as a yardstick to this day, so I have to convert either way to compare.
    John
    That is actually one of the reasons I found it so easy to start thinking in litres/100km. Perhaps our family was bigger and we had more kids loaded into Dad's FJ Holden, but we generally got about 28mpg. I had always seen that as some sort of benchmark. Since that was about 10 L/100k, it seemed to offer such an easy way of calculating fuel consumption. I didn't even really have to do any multiplication, since multiplying by 10 just involves adding a 0. Perhaps if my parents had owned a thirsty Yank tank that used something like 18mpg and I had become accustomed to that figure, I would not have found the transistion so easy. I suspect that part of the reason I changed was because when I used L/100km, there was really no maths involved. In fact because of the need to divide by 100. All I had to do was remove a 0. So 670 km would need 67 litres. What could be easier?

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    Quote Originally Posted by vnx205 View Post
    So 670 km would need 67 litres. What could be easier?
    Provided your claim that the former case is more common - but my belief is that it is equally common to put your example as "My tank holds 80l - will this take me more than 670km?" Using your figures the answer is it will take me 800km so I have a margin.

    You can make the calculation either way - but your main concern is "Am I going to run out of fuel?", which you can answer by either calculating the fuel required for your trip and comparing it to how much you have, or calculate how far you can go on the fuel you have and compare this to the distance you have to go.

    And for your figures, (670km, 10l/100km or 10km/l) the calculation is equally easy - in fact, by simply dropping the zero you have actually divided by ten (which is the calculation for 10km/l), where if you had actually used 10l/100km you should have divided 670 by 100 to get 6.7 and then multiplied it by ten to get 67, two steps rather than one. For a figure other than ten the calculation is a bit more complicated, but most people will have to use a calculator anyway if either the km/l or l/100km has anything after the decimal (as is usually the case)!

    John
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    I have read through all of this with intrigue. When I was growing up we also used the 30mpg yardstick and so as a 28 year old I still use MPG to calculate fuel efficiency for a given distance. Knowing that 60mp/h is roughly 100km/h and that in a minute I should be able to a mile in a minute.

    This is all well and good except the way the fuel prices are going we will all be get 0mpg and 0L/0K because no one will be able to afford juice for there motor.

    I guess its all upto the person and the way they interpret numbers.

    Rich

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