Justjimmy,
It's OK to disagree. I disagree that there are places all over the country where you can drive a constant 70 without interference from other traffic. Those kinds of places hardly exist east of the Mississippi river. Even here in Texas, it's almost impossible to find places like that. There is just too much traffic. The only time I have ever been able to do it was leaving my house at 12 midnight and found stretches on I-35 heading north and then on I-30 heading east out of Dallas. I was traveling between 70-75 MPH and got better than 22 MPG in my ST. By about 4:30am-5:00am that ended as traffic picked up.
I did not say that you would not get better mileage driving at 70, I said there was not much of a mileage difference between driving at 60 and at 70. When you are driving at 70 you encounter too many other vehicles that will require you to slow down and speed up and that causes a greater mileage penalty than driving at 70 mph. When you drive at 60 mph, you encounter far less traffic going slower than you are, and therefore get much better gas mileage.
I find that I actually get better gas mileage on my Mercedes driving at 70-75 mph than at 60-65 mph as long as there is little or no traffic around. Since my car is equiped with a fuel mileage gauge I can see instantly the difference in MPG cruising at 70 vs cruising at 60. Aerodynamics is a factor as is the 7 speed overdrive automatic transmission and a car designed for high-speed Autobahn cruising.
As for using the old vacuum gauge, it still works but really does not show exactly how much gas mileage you are gaining or loosing. That's why I recommend an accurate digital gauge that gives exact MPG readings accurate to a 10th of a MPG. You can actually see what your MPG are during a fast acceleration vs a slower more gradual acceleration.
...Rich
It's OK to disagree. I disagree that there are places all over the country where you can drive a constant 70 without interference from other traffic. Those kinds of places hardly exist east of the Mississippi river. Even here in Texas, it's almost impossible to find places like that. There is just too much traffic. The only time I have ever been able to do it was leaving my house at 12 midnight and found stretches on I-35 heading north and then on I-30 heading east out of Dallas. I was traveling between 70-75 MPH and got better than 22 MPG in my ST. By about 4:30am-5:00am that ended as traffic picked up.
I did not say that you would not get better mileage driving at 70, I said there was not much of a mileage difference between driving at 60 and at 70. When you are driving at 70 you encounter too many other vehicles that will require you to slow down and speed up and that causes a greater mileage penalty than driving at 70 mph. When you drive at 60 mph, you encounter far less traffic going slower than you are, and therefore get much better gas mileage.
I find that I actually get better gas mileage on my Mercedes driving at 70-75 mph than at 60-65 mph as long as there is little or no traffic around. Since my car is equiped with a fuel mileage gauge I can see instantly the difference in MPG cruising at 70 vs cruising at 60. Aerodynamics is a factor as is the 7 speed overdrive automatic transmission and a car designed for high-speed Autobahn cruising.
As for using the old vacuum gauge, it still works but really does not show exactly how much gas mileage you are gaining or loosing. That's why I recommend an accurate digital gauge that gives exact MPG readings accurate to a 10th of a MPG. You can actually see what your MPG are during a fast acceleration vs a slower more gradual acceleration.
...Rich