Why your car’s petrol tank is lying to you
BT
This is according to Wesley Procter, general manager at used car retailer getWorth, who said that when it comes to fuel consumption, there are three versions of the truth – namely what the manufacturer claims, what your car’s instruments tell you, and how much fuel your car actually uses in real life.
“It is very common to find that the amount of fuel you’re actually using is significantly different than your car’s manufacturer-claimed consumption,” he said.
He added that the issue is partly technical because it is difficult for a laboratory test to replicate real-world driving conditions. However, Procter said that manufacturers also have huge incentives to declare as low consumption as possible.
“The Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal has shown that measurement methods can be gamed,” he said.
“With the fuel consumption test, there’s no need to break the rules to achieve an edge – the engineers know the specific parameters and can optimise the car’s design to score well under those specific conditions. Move out the specific conditions of the lab test, and fuel consumption quickly deteriorates.”
This can be see seen UK website, HonestJohn, which gathers actual fuel consumption measurements from a community of thousands of users and compares them to claimed values, he said.
Other studies concur, and the Automobile Association of Australia recently commissioned independent real-world tests and found a similar result.
“They gathered the data for hundreds of different models and found that the average car uses 20% more fuel than its claimed consumption, which is pretty dismal,” Procter said .
“It reported that the cars tested used 23% more fuel than the claimed consumption and one car used a staggering 59% more.”
As for the fuel consumption claimed by your car’s instruments, he said that this might also be far off the mark.
“A car’s fuel computer is one of its least accurate accessories because there are considerable engineering challenges to measuring fuel consumption in real time.”
Having said this, Procter says that it is not difficult to test how much fuel your car actually uses in real-world conditions:
- Run your fuel down until your tank is half-full or less;
- Then fill up your tank to the brim and re-set your fuel counter and odometer (or write down your mileage);
- Drive until your tank is again less than half-full and fill it to the brim again. Now you know how many litres you’ve used and how many kilometres you’ve travelled;
- Divide the litres by the kilometres, multiply by 100, and you have litres per 100km;
- Now compare that to what your car’s instruments measured for that same distance and what your car’s claimed consumption is.
“It’s best to repeat this exercise several times to even out the measurements,” he said.
“You may be surprised at how large the difference is. And naturally, the actual consumption is typically higher than what the manufacturer or your instruments claimed.”