taketwoaspirin
New member
I also have been noticing the winter drop-off, and I've got two interesting bits of anecdotes to toss in; the first is that like joethetruckdriver, I'm pretty convinced that it's the warmup that kills the winter mileage. I recently had occasion to run an errand before heading in to work, so the car was mostly warmed up when I left; I haven't seen nice big numbers like that since early fall (a one-time 57 mpg for the full trip, vs. a reasonably repeatable 49-50 mpg for the same trip once the temperature dipped below freezing, all numbers from Torque).
The second bit is that at the end of the last tank, I switched over to a set of Michelin X-Ice Xi3 snow tires, and I've noticed a small improvement in my mileage; it's too soon to say how much and given my commuting habits it'll be about a month before I can say anything with actual data, but I have been seeing +3 mpg over what I was getting with the stock Hankooks on for similar trips and weather a few weeks ago (53-ish for the downhill trip and 43-ish for the uphill, vs. 50/40 on the all-season tires).
The second bit is that at the end of the last tank, I switched over to a set of Michelin X-Ice Xi3 snow tires, and I've noticed a small improvement in my mileage; it's too soon to say how much and given my commuting habits it'll be about a month before I can say anything with actual data, but I have been seeing +3 mpg over what I was getting with the stock Hankooks on for similar trips and weather a few weeks ago (53-ish for the downhill trip and 43-ish for the uphill, vs. 50/40 on the all-season tires).