Tonyc712000
New member
I calculated 35 mpg on a trip back from Long Island to Ct. My average shows about 24. I don't know whats wrong......Have to check the air filter...
kinda dissapointed but i think it has more to do with the gas tank being so small. im refilling my car up every sunday or 1 a week.
Why does mine seem to suck? New car break-in time? I drive 10 miles round trip daily. All surface streets, avg 40 mph - my read out is pretty much locked in at 23 mpg. 1.8 Auto, 87 octane, no mods.
70,000 miles on my 2012 1.4 6M. I just made a trip from Cape Cod to Michigan about 1,000 miles. Cruise set at 72 I hand calculated 50.3 MPG with a light crosswind. My lifetime DIC has never been reset and is at 43.5. The vast majority of my miles are highway.
I am amazed at the efficiency of this car.
I believe the Sonic tank is less than the stated 12.2My cruze had a 15.6 gallon tank vs the Sonic 12.2 gallon one. Even that small difference is noticed, I was used to 400-500 mile tank averages with the cruze, would be lucky to get 350 miles on a Sonic.
keep calculating. you did not get 50 mpg at 72.....unless it was all downhill ...with a tailwind.
I believe the Sonic tank is less than the stated 12.2
I've got 14,000 and 30 months on my car now.
Too many things come into play as well, such as the gas I use (all 87 Octane after researching the recommendations and differences), as well as the time of year it is, the weather conditions, etc...
So, I find the cars ratings of 27 City, 37 Highway really are close to what I average.
I've gotten the 30 miles remaining warning for each fill up I've done and have never put in more than 10.614 gallons.I believe the 12.2 gallon tank is accurate for my 2015 sonic, the reason you get less when you fill is GM leave a little reserve capacity so the fuel pump will remain cooled properly by the fuel.
My 2012 1LT Cruze had a 15.6 gallon tank and more than once the low fuel warning would go off as I pulled up the pump, with the Cruze the low fuel warning went off right at 13.1 gallons burned, leaving a 2.5 gallon reserve.
I have not set off the sonic low fuel warning yet but I have filled up for over 9 gallons with only a couple lines left on the gauge. My guess there is a similar size reserve capacity on the sonic as my cruze had.
You must never drive your car! I put 95,000 miles on my Cruze in 48 months, and have had my Sonic for 3 months and already put on over 15,000 miles.
Cost per mile will almost always come out better on 87 octane, but I find the published MPG low when running premium gas all the time. I get 30MPG city and 41mpg highway with my 2015 Sonic LTZ hatchback automatic. My average over 15,000 miles is just under 37mpg with about 70% highway driving(not interstate).
You must never drive your car! I put 95,000 miles on my Cruze in 48 months, and have had my Sonic for 3 months and already put on over 15,000 miles.
Cost per mile will almost always come out better on 87 octane, but I find the published MPG low when running premium gas all the time. I get 30MPG city and 41mpg highway with my 2015 Sonic LTZ hatchback automatic. My average over 15,000 miles is just under 37mpg with about 70% highway driving(not interstate). EDIT: I should add these numbers are within 1MPG of what I seen with my cruze over 100,000 miles as well.
Not to go too far off topic, but seeing as you own(ed) both a Cruze and Sonic, what do you like or dislike about both. And do they get about same MPG's for same trip?
I've gotten the 30 miles remaining warning for each fill up I've done and have never put in more than 10.614 gallons.
Interesting to know. As much as I'd like to test the reserve tank capacity, I'm comfortable filling up after using 10 or so gallons haha.Sounds like there is around a 2 gallon reserve on the sonic, which makes sense because the tank is 3 gallons overall smaller than the cruze, which has a 2.5 gallon reserve.
Again GM put this reserve in place so the fuel pump will never be starved of fuel and overheat (you have to keep it submerged and pumping fuel to stay cool). This is also part of the reason I recommend against always running the tank so low.
Fuel levels below 1/2 tank can cause condensation inside the tank with the temperature swings daytime to night. Keeping the tank as full as possible will eliminate this. Two reasons this occurs, less fuel in the tank will change temperature more readily and the airspace inside the tank being larger than the fuel level.
I'm guessing crappy CA gas is the reason I'm averaging 33 mpg lifetime right now.