Personally I'd give it a little longer, now you know
how to switch between trip and total averages try to modify your driving to get the trip average up as this responds quicker to any throttle / break use.. To get the best mpg I have to really keep the right foot just feathering the throttle when needed.. The very tall gearing on the Ecos does take some getting used to and I also find mpg creeps up when I leave the motorway and get on some flat A roads sat at 40 in 4th around 1500 rpm
I'll probably do that. On a journey home today, it did some town driving but was at a pretty constant 30 or 40mph as the lights were kind, a short blast on the motorway, and then mainly A roads at 40-50mph until I got near home and did more town driving constantly at 30mph (lights were kind again).
I averaged 57.5mpg (which is a bit better) but it wasn't the motorway driving that helped, it was the A road driving and constant speed town driving. On the motorway at 70mph, on flat parts, I was getting low to mid 50s at 70mph (which is a bit better than before).
I'll give it probably 2 or 3 more tanks, and if I don't average around 60mpg, I'm taking it back in. I don't think I'm being optimistic asking for that, because I've seen plenty of people in the same engine around this age getting that.
I'd say let it run in, have it's first oil change and see where you go from there.
On a side issue, my car came with Pirelli P7s, and they wern't great at anything.
Michelin Energy Savers or Goodyear Efficient Grips would be a better option.
That's a good point, as I am fitted with Pirelli P7s, which may be affecting slightly. I can't afford to upgrade until the tyres need it though, so am going to have to wait on that front.
One thing it might be worth noting, is that I bought the car from hobins of bury, but have since been told not to go back there as they aren't very good. I fear they may have been a bit lax with the servicing and possibly missed an ECU update or something? I dunno, maybe I'm clutching at straws! If it's still not good over the next couple of tanks, I'll probably take it to the local dealer and ask them to check for error codes or ECU updates and go from there.
I'm SAFED(safe and fuel efficient driving) trained and have taught others
how to do it, but you just ignored the advice I gave you.
Not one of the people I trained with thought they would improve their mpg as they thought they were driving fine.Every one of them did, some by over 200%.
I did note the way you said to to drive, and I have done what you said today, and noticed a small increase on motorway mileage, so hopefully this will
help. I've been advised that with a CR engine to keep it off load and keep it at slightly higher revs. The max torque is at 1500RPM so I'm aiming my gear changes to land around that because it's not laboured.
Someone else on another forum, like you suggested my town driving revs could be slightly low, causing the DPF regen on the motorways causing my low mpg, so I'll keep driving like this and see how I go over the next 2 tanks.
Now that's kind of interesting as according to the
brochure to get the 99g of CO figure the green E ecomotive has a few aero tweeks (filled in front grill & front wheel air deflectors) as well as low rolling resistance tyres.
If Seat are no longer fitting LRR tyres does that mean the car no longer meets tax band A requirements?
Apologies for getting a little of topic..
Done a little research and LRR tyres would in general offer another 3 mpg, I noticed around a 3 mpg drop when I fitted my 18" wheels shod with Dunlop rubber which isn't supposed to be very fuel efficient.
so I'm in total possibly 6 mpg down on the max I can squeeze out of mine so 80 mpg is possible!
Are you driving an ecomotive? How many miles are on yours, and could you maybe give me a description of how you drive it (revs etc) just so I can get an idea
I'm still on the standard 16" wheels and I drove it for about 40 mins earlier some dual carriageway some motorway and some traffic and round the street style driving(just about all types)and the highest I got was 40.2 mpg.
Those figures of 74 mpg etc seem a million miles away to be honest.
Looks like the pirelli p7's are a cheaper equivalent to the low resistance tyres and are put on deliberately.
I don't know if it
Would affect the co2 emissions though,that might be how they're getting away with it perhaps?
Nice car to.looks like mine
Yeah, you're is still much lower mileage than mine, so I'd expect that, around my mileage, I would expect you to be above me, as that's what other users of this engine have reported.
Realistically I think you are looking at mid to upper 50's when everything has settled in and depending on your driving terrain and technique for a day to day mpg figure.
Not sure if something has changed in the way manufacturers can quote the 3 mpg figures but I've just been speaking with a friend who owns a Focus ecotech and he is getting considerably less than book figures as well.
Maybe the OEMs have found a loophole in the way the mpg tests are carried out..
I don't think 50s is realistic for this car, I think it's low. Many other users have reported (In the Leon, Fabia, and Golf) easily managing mpgs in the 70s on motorway runs at 60mph. These aren't ridiculous motorway runs either, they're only shortish ones of say 30 miles. They're even averaging in the 70s and late 60s easy.
As above, I'll give it a couple more tanks, report back and see whether I've decided to take it in to have a look at. If anyone has any other posts, ideas etc, or responses to questions above, please post them
Cheers.