10 Great Tips For
Saving Money On Gas
The message
screams at us from every sign at every corner gas
station—gasoline prices are at an all-time high and there’s no
indication that relief is anywhere in site. In fact, many
experts are saying it could get worse—much worse—and that’s
sending masses of motorists scrambling for ways to cut down on
gas consumption.
But what to do,
when old, outdated myths and outright scams are filling the
airwaves and internet? Just today we saw a television news
station advising drivers to fill up their gas tanks in the
morning when gas is cooler and more condensed, as a way of
getting more for your money.
This outdated
advice may have been true once—we don’t know for sure—but we do
know that today gas stations store fuel below ground in
30,000-gallon tanks. That means gas stays at relatively the
same temperature and does not expand and contract with daily
cycles.
We’ve seen all
sorts of other bad advice that’s outdated, ill-advised or just
outright fraud. Claims that devises which bleed air into the
carburetor can dramatically increase gas mileage turn out not
to be true when put to the test under closely monitored
conditions.
Same for those
fuel-line gadgets that supposedly help you save on gas by
heating it before it enters the carburetor, or magnets that
clamp on to the outside of the fuel line to magically change
the molecular structure of gasoline, or metallic additives that
claim they ionize gas for great savings. They’ve all been
tested by the EPA, which found the only thing these devises
reduced was the amount of cash in motorist’s
wallets.
Face it—with a
long-term gas crises looming ahead, there are plenty of
governmental bodies and even private industries that have good
reason to want to help you save on gas. Here are ten tips they
all agree will really help you do the job:
1.
Keep your tires properly
inflated according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. Under
inflated tires make the vehicle run less efficiently and waste
gas.
2.
Don’t be an aggressive
driver. Jackrabbit starts, tire screeching stops and speeding
can lower your gas mileage by 5% on city streets and as much as
33% on highways.
3.
Avoid excessive idling.
Idling your engine for 15 minutes wastes one gallon of gas.
Whenever possible, time your traveling to avoid lingering at
traffic lights and reduce the amount of time you let your car
warm up. In warm weather, driving is actually the most
efficient way to warm up a combustion
engine.
4.
Slow down. The faster you go,
the less efficiently your vehicle uses gas. 55 is the most
efficient mph on highways. Go above 60 and your fuel efficiency
decreases rapidly.
5.
Remove excess weight. If
you’re used to driving around with your golf clubs and a chain
saw in your trunk, you’re paying a heavy price for it. Removing
an extra 100 pounds from your car will increase your fuel
efficiency by as much as 2%.
6.
Don’t use premium fuel unless
your vehicle manufacturer requires it. And double or triple
check your automakers advice by asking true auto experts—not
just shade tree mechanics—for their best advice. We’re not
pointing fingers at anyone, but some automakers with ties to
big petroleum producers have been known to recommend premium
fuels in cases where regular would do just as
well.
7.
Have a mechanic check your
oxygen sensors. A faulty oxygen sensor will mistakenly send
more gas to the engine then is needed. Replacing a faulty
oxygen sensor can save you as many as six fill-ups a
year.
8.
Make sure your air filter is
clean. A dirty air filter dramatically reduces fuel efficiency,
so don’t just blindly follow some predetermined schedule for
putting in a new one. Consider your actual driving conditions.
Driving on dirt roads—or just plain dirty roads—or in heavily
polluted cities will get your air filter filthy a lot faster
than you might expect,
9.
Check on your “forgotten
filters.” Most motorists know to check the air
filter when they do a tune-up, but not many think to check on
the fuel filter, the PCV valve and the breather
filter.
Replacing these “forgotten” filters
once a year or every 12,000 miles can help improve your
gas mileage by up to 15 percent.
10. Get a new gas cap—and
make it one with a lock. Old gas caps can get out of
shape. As gas fumes expand in your tank, they can escape
past a faulty seal and waste precious fuel. Some studies
suggest you can save as much as 17 gallons of gas a year
just by replacing an old gas cap. And consider making
that new gas cap a locking model because sadly, as gas
prices go up, so do gas
thefts.
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