Ok, I'm not advocating this technique...officially....but I've always driven my manuals in neutral when opportunity exists to decrease gas consumption. Recently I've found numerous articles stating that in fact it does not increase gas mileage. Few reasons are as follows:
1) Most fuel management programs increase fuel to engine at or slighly below 1k RPM to keep car at idle more so than letting the engine rotate at 1500-2000k.
2) Even with the engine running at a higher RPM without applying throttle fuel managment automatically cuts off gas.
Well, thats about it. I think I got the general jist of it correct. Downhill coasting appears to me the biggest fact that mileage is affected in gear. You have the tranny working against the car gaining speed, thus decreasing distance. Tranny holds the car back when going downhill.
Maybe I'm an idiot, so someone educate me. So far the MPG estimator seems to confirm my theory...shifting into idle increases fuel economy.
Chime in..
1) Most fuel management programs increase fuel to engine at or slighly below 1k RPM to keep car at idle more so than letting the engine rotate at 1500-2000k.
2) Even with the engine running at a higher RPM without applying throttle fuel managment automatically cuts off gas.
Well, thats about it. I think I got the general jist of it correct. Downhill coasting appears to me the biggest fact that mileage is affected in gear. You have the tranny working against the car gaining speed, thus decreasing distance. Tranny holds the car back when going downhill.
Maybe I'm an idiot, so someone educate me. So far the MPG estimator seems to confirm my theory...shifting into idle increases fuel economy.
Chime in..
Last edited: