[DMCForum] Re: DeLorean MPG (Martin G)
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[DMCForum] Re: DeLorean MPG (Martin G)
- From: "content22207" <brobertson@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 20 May 2005 23:41:37 -0000
OK -- *THIS* is scary. Can I borrow Greg's Hell Thermometer...
Bill Robertson
#5939
>--- In DMCForum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Martin Gutkowski <martin@xxxx> wrote:
> Now you guys know that Bill and I often don't see eye-to-eye, and on
> readig this e-mail, I jumped in and calculated my own MPG based on a
> surprisingly long trip in my own car. I remember the total cost of the
> fuel (a shade under £40), the cost per litre (81.9p) filling an almost
> dry tank to the brim, then driving from Newcastle to London without
> filling - approx 275 miles, and had probably 20 miles left in the tank
> on arrival. To cut a long story short, I thought the car did very well,
> better than it ever did with a lambda system and cat (both now binned).
> Using onlineconversion.com, and a calculator, this averaged out at just
> under 20mpg where the g is US liquid gallon. If I were to work it
out in
> imperial gallons, well it drops to nearer 15!
>
> I used 95 RON unleaded - which is our "regular" unleaded. Read below
for
> explanation (quote)
>
> The most important characteristic of petrol is its Research Octane
> Number (RON) or octane rating, which is a measure of how resistant
> petrol is to premature detonation (knocking). It is measured
relative to
> a mixture of isooctane (2,2,4-trimethylpentane) and n-heptane. So an
> 87-octane petrol has the same knock resistance as a mixture of 87%
> isooctane and 13% n-heptane.
>
> There is another type of Octane, called "Motor Octane Number" (MON),
> which is a better measure of how the fuel behaves when under load. Its
> definition is also based on the mixture of isooctane and n-heptane that
> has the same performance. Depending on the composition of the fuel, the
> MON of a modern petrol will be about 10 points lower than the RON.
> Normally fuel specifications require both a minimum RON and a
minimum MON.
>
> In most countries (including all of Europe and Australia) the
'headline'
> octane that would be shown on the pump is the RON: but in the United
> States and some other countries the headline number is the average of
> the RON and the MON, sometimes called the "roaD Octane Number" or DON,
> or (R+M)/2. Because of the 10 point difference noted above this means
> that the octane in the United States will be about 5 points lower than
> the same fuel elsewhere: 87 octane fuel, the "normal" petrol in the US
> and Canada, would be 92 in Europe.
>
> Martin
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