G35 Sedan V35 2003-06 Discussion about the 1st Generation V35 G35 Sedan

Poor Gas Mileage?

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  #31  
Old 12-23-2008, 12:19 PM
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Originally Posted by G SEDAN
winter additives, cold weather also may result in lower tire pressure, your air filter may need to be cleaned....etc.



Thank God my navi estimates the MPG for me, I'd be pulling my hair figuring out the MPG all the time lol
I kinda hate the navi figuring out the MPG since it gets to a point where you have about 40 miles, maybe less left, and it's completely inaccurate or even worse, when it shows *.*. Like right now, last I saw I had 9 miles left and that was when I was 10 miles from work...now I have to get home, which is a 20 mile drive
 
  #32  
Old 12-23-2008, 01:21 PM
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Originally Posted by stclairwest
you guys are lucky, i only get 350 km a full tank while you guys are getting 300+ miles
You are not alone stclairwest,
2003 sedan here , all city, heavy foot,
New plugs, filters, installed and no change in mpg

350 km WINTER (with weight in trunk)
420 km SUMMER
460 km BEST
with a 65L fillup

Dealership told me K&N filter will help MPG .
Has any one here tried th k&N and got results?
 
  #33  
Old 12-26-2008, 02:22 PM
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Originally Posted by TIRE_SMOKE96
I changed my plugs and my milage jump alot. Maybe its time for a tune up for your ride?
Seriously? How many miles on your G when you changed them?

Anyone know off hand when the first service interval is for the spark plugs to be changed?
 
  #34  
Old 12-26-2008, 02:49 PM
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Anyone know off hand when the first service interval is for the spark plugs to be changed?
105,000 miles for mine. Can't speak for all years/models.
 
  #35  
Old 12-26-2008, 03:07 PM
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I got a ridiculous 16 mpg to a full tank with 93 octane ..But i was also driving the car in sub-zero temperatures as well. Maybe that had something to do with it..Need to see if summer mpg varies considerably over winter performance !
 
  #36  
Old 01-26-2009, 08:16 PM
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same here. I am getting 12-14mpg for 93 octane. Again I drive in sub-zero temperatures. Should check back in summeR

MO
 
  #37  
Old 01-26-2009, 08:33 PM
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Just took a quick look at mine. 20 mpg on that last tank. I drive hard pretty much all the time. it's been 20-40 degrees in my area. 91 octane.
 
  #38  
Old 01-26-2009, 08:47 PM
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As for the warm up, I have a built motor so it may differ a bit but my oil pressure is sky high for the first ~2-3 minutes my car idles and then still is off the chart if I give the car any gas.

I open my garage and remote start my car from inside the house every morning. Then I let the car run for at least 5 minutes before I get in. At that point oil pressure is at least 60-70psi at idle (900rpm). As soon as I drive, I give very light gas and keep rpm's below 2500 for the next couple minutes and even then oil pressure goes above 100psi. After another 5 minutes (~12-13 min total running time) I start to see oil temp move a tiny bit above 140 degrees. I still am very gentle until the oil temp gets to at least 160 and pressure stays under 100psi. Only time it goes over that I am in boost. This does not ever occur until oil is at least 170 degrees.

After I installed all these gauges I was shocked to see how hard cold running is on an engine. Now I am soooo nice to my car until it's at operating temp.

I agree that idle is not the best way to warm up "car" but it is a good way to safely warm up the engine. After that you still need to be nice until the other drivetrain parts have had time to warm.

Also, I do all this in a garage, in Phoenix AZ where it doesn't even get that cold. Imagine how much harder it is in the north...
 
  #39  
Old 01-26-2009, 10:24 PM
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Originally Posted by ttrank
.... I agree that idle is not the best way to warm up "car" but it is a good way to safely warm up the engine.
Originally Posted by jimmyc13
Are you serious? How is that "the worst type of warm"? I religiously do not drive my car until the engine is warm (with the thought of it being bad for the car to drive it cold). I know I've seen other threads on here that mentioned you can start driving after 30 seconds of startup, but how can letting the car idle be bad? Very curious!
DaveB is correct!!! To piggyback on his comments, in ancient times when carburators were used, there was this unwritten law about warming up your car before driving. The law was deeply rooted in poor vaporization of the gas in a cold carburator and intake manifold. At that time, warming up the engine was supposed to eliminate hesitation and stalling. However, what they didn't know then was that extended warmup (>3-5 minutes) could actually cause damage to the engine by diluting the oil with excess fuel, and it could also result in hot spots in the combustion chamber (which over time causes uneven micro-wear on the rings and combustion chamber).

A cold engine experiences excessive wear due to the rich mixture required by the EFI system. This tends to wash fuel from the cylinder walls and aggravates wear between the rings and cylinder bores. Engineers include in the ECU an analytical/semi-empirical mathematical model of the heat transfer within the engine. It is basically a super-thermostat. The ECU uses information from various temp- and flow-sensors to adjust the parameters that affect an engine heating: coolant flow, richness of the mixture, etc. This is all designed to heat up the engine as quickly as possible.

An engine that is driven immediately (but slowly for the initial 200-300 yards) will have much higher coolant and oil temperatures than one that idles for 5 minutes. At the same time you will also warm up the rest of the drivetrain like the transmission and wheel bearings. Something idling can not do.

My suggestion is 15-30 seconds to let the oil circulate throughout the engine (it takes this long for colder climates), and then drive out slowly for the initial 1/4 mile.

Finally, winter gas is made to evaporate faster and cause better starts during cold weather, one reason for the lower mpg.
 

Last edited by Braintree; 01-27-2009 at 06:19 AM.
  #40  
Old 01-26-2009, 11:01 PM
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I am guilty of running my car in the morning for like 15-20mins.... but thats because when its -10 degrees out, i want to get into a warm car, not a -10 degree car.
 
  #41  
Old 01-26-2009, 11:06 PM
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Shell premium gas has no ethanol. Ethanol is bad in every imaginable way (bad for your car, bad for your mileage, bad for power, bad for the environment, and bad for global food supplies).

I get slightly better mileage with Shell gas than with any other brand. Most premium gas here has only 5% ethanol while regular has 10% - 15%, though these numbers all change with local laws. Sunoco has 94 octane, but I see no reason to use it because it will not result in better mileage and it has 5% ethanol.

FYI, this is in Ontario. Local laws will alter the ethanol numbers for you.
 
  #42  
Old 01-27-2009, 06:26 AM
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Originally Posted by Wannabe6MT
I am guilty of running my car in the morning for like 15-20mins.... but thats because when its -10 degrees out, i want to get into a warm car, not a -10 degree car.
The really great problem with these lengthy warm-ups is that if you're not in the car and something goes wrong (e.g., a chain of events wherein the engine overheats due to a blocked radiator core and the sensors don't pick it up in time, et.), you're not there to stop the damage. Sorta like leaving a baby unattended in the living room while you go out for a 10 minute smoke.
 
  #43  
Old 01-27-2009, 08:26 AM
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damn...i guess them 10min warm up in the winter is what's really killing my gas mileage. time to reprogram the remote start
 
  #44  
Old 01-27-2009, 08:49 AM
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Originally Posted by BXG35x
damn...i guess them 10min warm up in the winter is what's really killing my gas mileage. time to reprogram the remote start
Yep... a 10-15 minute warm-up can easily consume 3X more gas than driving the car after a 15-30 second warm-up. With a full tank of gas and 20 lengthy warm-ups (at 10 minutes apiece), this could translate into a loss of >1 gallon (or a drop of 2-5mpg) of gas, depending on how efficient your car runs- not to mention that wasted carbon footprint!
 
  #45  
Old 01-27-2009, 10:49 AM
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I warm up the car for 5-10 minutes so the interior is warm when I need to transport the kids. Otherwise, it's start up, 30 seconds, and drive.
 


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