Speed limit on motorways.

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Tin Pot

Guru
This argument has be done on driving forums many many times. Driving faster is less efficient, believe or continue for a few days and believe then. Your choice!
 

tommaguzzi

Über Member
Location
County Durham
On a steady run up the M5 from North Devon to Redditch, at a steady 60 mph, I can get 69mpg in my Peugeot 207SW 1.6HDi.
Towing the caravan I get 32 mpg, or 46 mpg if I tuck in behind a decent sized lorry.
General knocking around, town and country, short trips, I get about 56mpg tank to tank.

Wow bloody hell every day is a school day!
I honestly never realised you caravaners drafted lorries!
I will look out for that now. Thanks for that.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
Most cars will give excellent economy at an indicated 60, which is more like a real life 56, because the extra urban test is conducted at that speed so they tweak the engine map to suit the test.
 
OP
OP
gavroche

gavroche

Getting old but not past it
Location
North Wales
[QUOTE 4811189, member: 9609"]how have you calculated that and what figures did you get for 40 & 50 mph ?[/QUOTE]
40would be in 4th gear so higher fuel consumption.
Don't know at 50, too slow on dual carriage / motorway.
 
So what is the most fuel efficient speed for your car?

A Random link suggests 55 mph and the following graph

live_fueleff_graph.jpg
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PaulSB

Squire
While we're talking about fuel consumption: cruise control was mentioned earlier. But cruise control - driving at constant speed - is far from optimum. You want to aim to keep the engine doing a constant thing so you want to have a constant speed on the flat but speed the car up downhill and slow down up hill. That's not AIUI what most cruise controls do.

I can only offer practical rather than technical experience. I use cruise control whenever practical. When using CC I can see the fuel consumption on the flat is steady and reduces on descents. Yes consumption increases on inclines s but this would be true without CC and I feel is compensated for on the flat/descents.

If I drive at the same speed without CC I can observe fuel consumption varying constantly. I put this variation down to the difficulty for a driver of keeping exactly the correct pressure on the accelerator pedal to maintain a constant speed.

My view is a machine is better placed to maintain a constant speed than a human who faces two difficulties in achieving this - applying a constant pressure and not being distracted by all that is happening around him/her.
 
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Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
Wow bloody hell every day is a school day!
I honestly never realised you caravaners drafted lorries!
I will look out for that now. Thanks for that.
I don't tuck in too close, it's not necessary. If I monitor my on board fuel consumption readout I can find the optimum distance to follow. The sweet spot is further back than you would think.
Best ones to follow are the tall curtain siders that are limited to 100 kph/56 mph. Their draft goes back a fair distance - certainly one that's safe to follow and still make a significant improvement in fuel consumption. This is ideal as the towing speed limit on a motorway is 60 mph.
 
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Tim Hall

Guest
Location
Crawley
I don't tuck in too close, it's not necessary. If I monitor my on board fuel consumption readout I can find the optimum distance to follow. The sweet spot is further back than you would think.
Best ones to follow are the tall curtain siders that are limited to 100 kph/56 mph. Their draft goes back a fair distance - certainly one that's safe to follow and still make a significant improvement in fuel consumption.
Does your drafting conflict with the "two second rule" advice?
 

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
Does your drafting conflict with the "two second rule" advice?
I just knew someone would come up with that.
Drafting usually works out at about one and a half seconds.
Tell me, how many vehicles do you honestly see following the two second rule on a motorway - or anywhere else for that matter?
Apart from you, of course.;)
 

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
I try to do so Papa Dirkie, because of my police ninja driver training, but its blummen difficult because if you leave a sensible gap some plum sticks their car in it.
Exactly.
I do the same as you and for very similar reasons.;)
Following a professional driver, travelling at a constant speed in a large lorry, in lane 1, at 1 1/2 seconds is probably a lot safer than following Plum Boy in his BMW at 2 seconds at 80 mph in lane 3.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
I tend to stick at the NS, find a nice lorry and plug in behind it. Unless the roads are empty, it makes zero difference to journey times on the 120 mile jaunt down to my Dads in Kent, but makes a big difference to fuel consumption and stress levels.
 
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