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Vitara fuel economy?
Vitara fuel economy?
What kind of fuel figures are you getting on your Vitaras?
In my 92 model swb g16a carb i'm getting 11L/100 on the highway doing just over 100km/h. Running standard tyres etc. I read somewhere it should be 8.5L/100 city driving, the best mine will do is 11 and is usually worse.
I'd like to get a bit more out of a tank to improve range for long trips and save some $$$
In my 92 model swb g16a carb i'm getting 11L/100 on the highway doing just over 100km/h. Running standard tyres etc. I read somewhere it should be 8.5L/100 city driving, the best mine will do is 11 and is usually worse.
I'd like to get a bit more out of a tank to improve range for long trips and save some $$$
92 Vitara swb
I have a 94 vitara with the 1.6 fuel injected. I have slightly bigger wheels a two inch lift bull bar, dual battery lots of other heavy bits and mine sits around 10.5 in the city and around 8- 9 litres per hundred on the highway.
There are a few different reason for varying fuel consumption,
Fuel filters, air filters and other regular maintenence are a start. Pumping ur tyres up correctly, and making sure u have ur wheels aligned and balanced. Wheel and diff bearings etc.
ALso keep in mind that fuel consumption in a 15 year old car is not going to be what hte guide book states unless you've had the entire car rebuilt
There are a few different reason for varying fuel consumption,
Fuel filters, air filters and other regular maintenence are a start. Pumping ur tyres up correctly, and making sure u have ur wheels aligned and balanced. Wheel and diff bearings etc.
ALso keep in mind that fuel consumption in a 15 year old car is not going to be what hte guide book states unless you've had the entire car rebuilt
Thats a little high
Does the vehicle still have the original exhaust manifold on it, some of the carby vitaras had an engine pipe that collapsed on itself restricting exhaust flow then cracking manifold and clogging air filter, all creating poor power and economy.
Suzuki did a service campain replacing them when the vehicles were new but to my knowledge only 40 to 50 percent got done.
Most vitaras get 9-10 ltr per hung on the highway sitting on 110kph
Does the vehicle still have the original exhaust manifold on it, some of the carby vitaras had an engine pipe that collapsed on itself restricting exhaust flow then cracking manifold and clogging air filter, all creating poor power and economy.
Suzuki did a service campain replacing them when the vehicles were new but to my knowledge only 40 to 50 percent got done.
Most vitaras get 9-10 ltr per hung on the highway sitting on 110kph
93 NJ,5 speed,2" body lift,32" muddies
There's nuttn like momentum
There's nuttn like momentum
well im only getting 280km from a 42L tank..(is that how big they are?) mines a 97 SWB 1.6 efi. 280km city and highway on a full tank
used to get 350km - 390km when i first bought it - 2yrs ago...
am changing the fuel filter, gearbox oil ect and will update the changes to economy i hope lol
cheers islandvit
used to get 350km - 390km when i first bought it - 2yrs ago...
am changing the fuel filter, gearbox oil ect and will update the changes to economy i hope lol
cheers islandvit
just beat a Marlin in a swimming race
Thanks for all the replies.
It receives all the regular maintenence stuff.
I checked the exhaust manifold and it has a small crack. It's a fine crack about 3 or 4 cm long. I'll look into getting another manifold or extractors for it.
I't would be great to get it down to 9L/100 that'd give me about an extra 100km range. At the moment i don't sit on 110 because seems to chew more fuel.
It's a good point that being older and everything a bit worn it wont be as economical as new but i'd be happy with even 10L/100 doing 110 on the highway.
Do larger tyres affect fuel consumption much? I'm looking at going 235 70 or 75
It receives all the regular maintenence stuff.
I checked the exhaust manifold and it has a small crack. It's a fine crack about 3 or 4 cm long. I'll look into getting another manifold or extractors for it.
I't would be great to get it down to 9L/100 that'd give me about an extra 100km range. At the moment i don't sit on 110 because seems to chew more fuel.
It's a good point that being older and everything a bit worn it wont be as economical as new but i'd be happy with even 10L/100 doing 110 on the highway.
Do larger tyres affect fuel consumption much? I'm looking at going 235 70 or 75
92 Vitara swb
i have a 1990 swb G16A( needs a service thatd help abit.) just drove to ballina and back and it does around 330 highway k's a tank at 110-120
it revs 3.5k @ 110 km/h and 4k @ 120km/h
im thinking of upgrading my tyre size so i do less revs on the highway cause thats where almost all my k's are.
it revs 3.5k @ 110 km/h and 4k @ 120km/h
im thinking of upgrading my tyre size so i do less revs on the highway cause thats where almost all my k's are.
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zookieboi wrote:i have a 1990 swb G16A( needs a service thatd help abit.) just drove to ballina and back and it does around 330 highway k's a tank at 110-120
it revs 3.5k @ 110 km/h and 4k @ 120km/h
im thinking of upgrading my tyre size so i do less revs on the highway cause thats where almost all my k's are.
But the increase in rolling resistance from the tyres, as well as the extra weight and hight, combined with the fact that lowering your revs may make the engine labour to maintain the required speed, will probably eat up any potential savings.
Layto....
[quote="v840"]Just between me and you, I actually really dig the Megatwon, but if anyone asks, I'm going to shitcan it as much as possible! :D[/quote]
Nope, sorry.
Engines (at stoichiometry) consume about 0.5lb of fuel/hp/hr. (Mightymouse will have the metric version of this - it's 5 grams of fuel per KW per minute, or something)
If you fit larger tyres, it will take more power to push the car down the road at a given speed, due to rolling resistance, weight, gearing and aerodynamic profile.
If you need more HP to push the car down the road, you will consume more fuel.
However, if your car is currently running rich or is outside of it's efficient working zone, (shouldn't be the case with a well serviced, stock car) then gains in economy can be achieved though tuning, but generally they will be very slight.
I reckon a sierra needs about 40hp to push it down the road at 100km/h. Peak HP is 67. 40hp constant = about 10l/100km. A vitara will be much the same. It's hard to imagine it needing much less fuel to do the same job.
Steve.
Engines (at stoichiometry) consume about 0.5lb of fuel/hp/hr. (Mightymouse will have the metric version of this - it's 5 grams of fuel per KW per minute, or something)
If you fit larger tyres, it will take more power to push the car down the road at a given speed, due to rolling resistance, weight, gearing and aerodynamic profile.
If you need more HP to push the car down the road, you will consume more fuel.
However, if your car is currently running rich or is outside of it's efficient working zone, (shouldn't be the case with a well serviced, stock car) then gains in economy can be achieved though tuning, but generally they will be very slight.
I reckon a sierra needs about 40hp to push it down the road at 100km/h. Peak HP is 67. 40hp constant = about 10l/100km. A vitara will be much the same. It's hard to imagine it needing much less fuel to do the same job.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
Oh, as an aside, manufacturers will always try and build the most efficient cars possible (for the $$$) and still have acceptable performance. At a constant speed, the power demand is mostly down to rolling resistance and aerodynamics. People don't want to drive cars with deliberately bad economy unless they buy a rotary.
A couple of examples:
206KW Sti Impreza - 1575Kg, lots of driveline drag, sticky tyres - about 9l/100km cruise.
190kw 330i BMW - similar weight, 2WD, auto, excellent engine technology, 6.5L/100km cruise
121Kw Renaultsport Clio, 1075Kg, Manual, abour 6.5l/100km cruise
Once up to speed, aerodynamics and rolling resistance play a major role.
It will be very hard to significantly improve the cruising economy of a car without addressing aerodynamics and rolling resistance.
I've seen some interesting figures- a Bugatti veyron, with 1000hp, only needs about 150 hp to push along its 2000kg at about 130 km/hr.... and 1000hp to push it at 406km/hr (from memory, wind resistance is a square law)
Steve.
Unless you subscribe to the Zagan school of physics. (check the HHO kit thread in General Tech)
A couple of examples:
206KW Sti Impreza - 1575Kg, lots of driveline drag, sticky tyres - about 9l/100km cruise.
190kw 330i BMW - similar weight, 2WD, auto, excellent engine technology, 6.5L/100km cruise
121Kw Renaultsport Clio, 1075Kg, Manual, abour 6.5l/100km cruise
Once up to speed, aerodynamics and rolling resistance play a major role.
It will be very hard to significantly improve the cruising economy of a car without addressing aerodynamics and rolling resistance.
I've seen some interesting figures- a Bugatti veyron, with 1000hp, only needs about 150 hp to push along its 2000kg at about 130 km/hr.... and 1000hp to push it at 406km/hr (from memory, wind resistance is a square law)
Steve.
Unless you subscribe to the Zagan school of physics. (check the HHO kit thread in General Tech)
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
That'd be the biggest way to make a difference. That's one of the reasons Land Rover made the first Range Rover suspension squat 1" over 80km/hr. (it also increases caster which helps high speed handling, but that's an aside)
Steve.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
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