Record Gas Prices Make it Perfect Time to "Be Car
Care Aware" With gas prices exceeding
two dollars a gallon in many parts of the country, the Car Care
Council is offering gas-saving maintenance and driving tips that
really work.
"Millions of dollars worth of
gasoline is wasted every day by motorists, because simple and
inexpensive vehicle maintenance is neglected," said Rich White,
executive director of the Car Care Council. "Loose or missing
gas caps, under-inflated tires, worn spark plugs and dirty air
filters all contribute to poor fuel economy."
The Car Care Council offers
these fuel-saving tips:
-
Vehicle gas caps – About
17 percent of the vehicles on the roads have gas caps that
are either damaged, loose or are missing altogether, causing
147 million gallons of gas to vaporize every year.
-
Under inflated tires –
When tires aren’t inflated properly it’s like driving with
the parking brake on and can cost a mile or two per
gallon.
-
Worn spark plugs – A
vehicle can have either four, six or eight spark plugs,
which fire as many as 3 million times every 1,000 miles,
resulting in a lot of heat and electrical and chemical
erosion. A dirty spark plug causes misfiring, which wastes
fuel. Spark plugs need to be replaced regularly.
-
Dirty air filters – An air
filter that is clogged with dirt, dust and bugs chokes off
the air and creates a “rich” mixture – too much gas being
burned for the amount of air, which wastes gas and causes
the engine to lose power. Replacing a clogged air filter can
improve gas mileage by as much as 10 percent, saving about
15 cents a gallon.
Fuel-saving driving tips include:
-
Don’t be an aggressive
driver – Aggressive driving can lower gas mileage by as much
as 33 percent on the highway and 5 percent on city streets,
which results in 7 to 49 cents per gallon.
-
Avoid excessive idling –
Sitting idle gets zero miles per gallon. Letting the vehicle
warm up for one to two minutes is sufficient.
-
Observe the speed limit –
Gas mileage decreases rapidly at speeds above 60 mph. Each
mph driven over 60 will result in an additional 10 cents per
gallon. To maintain a constant speed on the highway, cruise
control is recommended.
Some of the above statistics
were gathered from a U.S. Department of Energy Web site,
www.fueleconomy.gov.
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