Gas Saving Tips
- Who Are
The Hypermilers?
With gas hitting
record prices and no relief in site, a new gang is taking over
the roadways. They call themselves the “hypermilers.” They
don’t wear club jackets—at least, not yet. You can only
identify them by their obsessive attention to maximizing their
car’s gas mileages.
The term “hypermiler” seems to have
originated with hybrid-vehicle driving clubs whose members
actively compete to see who can go furthest in exceeding the
EPA’s (United States Environmental Protection Agency’s)
estimated fuel efficiency.
By using real-time mileage displays,
hypermilers are able to pinpoint the driving techniques that
deliver the best EPA ratings. Once identified, these techniques
can be tweaked and refined.
The trend started out within a
competitive atmosphere of drivers who put their hypermiling
talents to the test in hypermileage marathons. But as gas
prices began an unprecedented climb in 2007, hypermiling began
to draw media attention.
Today, the average hypermiler is less
likely to be a hybrid-driving competitor and more likely to be
a working man or woman trying to squeak some extra miles out of
a gas budget that’s begun taking a bigger and bigger bite out
of the typical household budget.
Even drivers of luxury SUV’s, the
vehicles favored by the more affluent families in America, are
showing an increasing interest in hypermiling, hoping that a
few tricks performed behind the wheel will lead to less sticker
shock in front of the gas pump.
Avid hypermilers claim they can increase
their mileage by better than forty percent. Many say they’ve
taken automobiles with an average miles-per-gallon rating of
27mpg and easily gotten to 40 mpg.
How is this accomplished? Hypermilers
rely on all the old standbys for saving gas, like driving the
speed limit and making sure their tires are inflated to the
manufactures recommendation.
But they also rely heavily on a new
technique of accelerating their vehicle to the posted legal
speed, then coasting as far as they can without further
acceleration.
Truly passionate hypermilers, however, go
even further, modifying the body of their car to make it more
streamlined and thus fuel-efficient.
Some use fiberglass and sheet metal for
their modifications and strive to make their vehicles look like
custom cars. Others care little for good looks, using parts
from abandoned cars, discarded highway signs and other odd
assortments of scrap metal to alter the outline of their
auto.
Although the term hypermiling has a
distinct North American accent, the concept of maximizing fuel
efficiency has worldwide appeal. In Europe, where gas prices
have long been as much as twice as high as prices in the U.S.,
the term “ecodriving” is used to describe tactics and
techniques that can be used by most drivers for more
energy-efficient use of their vehicles.
No matter where on the planet they live
and what they choose to call themselves, most drivers today
will agree that the days of low-cost gas and cars that guzzle
it with abandon are over. Dwindling gas supplies, rising prices
and the threats of pollution and global warming are all
indicators that hypermiling and ecodriving will become
permanent parts of not just the world vocabulary, but also the
world conscience.
"Save
Gas, Save Money, Save The
Environment"
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