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EPA's Gasoline Efficiency Tests Provide No Valid Information At All (hotair.com) 136

schwit1 writes from a report via Behind The Black: The tests the EPA uses to establish the fuel efficiency of cars are unreliable, and likely provide no valid information at all about the fuel efficiency of the cars tested. Robert Zimmerman reports from Behind The Black: "The law requiring cars to meet these fuel efficiency tests was written in the 1970s, and specifically sets standards based on the technology then. Worse, the EPA doesn't know exactly how its CAFE testing correlates with actual results, because it has never done a comprehensive study of real-world fuel economy. Nor does anyone else. The best available data comes from consumers who report it to the DOT (WARNING: Source may be paywalled) -- hardly a scientific sampling. Other than that, everything is fine. Companies are forced to spend billions on this regulation, the costs of which they immediately pass on to consumers, all based on fantasy and a badly-written law. Gee, I'm sure glad we never tried this with healthcare!"
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EPA's Gasoline Efficiency Tests Provide No Valid Information At All

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Perform a study and publish your results.

    • But it's easier to just rant about it online. Studies and facts are for nerds.

      • Re:Idea!!! (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @10:38PM (#52551567) Homepage

        Indeed, this is a pointless rant. The US uses a number of driving cycles for different purposes - FTP-75, HWFET, US06, and SC03. In terms of determining ratings that are presented to computers, US standards are by far the most stringest in the world. European cars are rated by the much less stringent NEDC, and Japanese cars by the laughable 10-15 cycle, where the highest speed involved in the whole cycle is 70 kph (under 45 mph), with an average speed 1/3rd of that.

        The US cycles are regularly updated - the most recent update to the FTP-75 was in 2008. And yes, it's made them more stringent, based on... wait for it.... research on how people drive, the thing that this rant claims doesn't occur. Now, it's true that, for consistency purposes, CAFE ratings (which the buyer never sees) still use the same measure that they did back in the 70s, and that there's different measures for different types of vehicles and the like. But that's because you don't want to break your comparisons to older vehicles; anyone actually working with CAFE numbers is going to be aware of their limitations. John Smith from Podunk Arkansas isn't going to be messing around with CAFE figures; CAFE exists basically for accounting purposes, to see if the fleet is overall getting more or less efficient.

        • to see if the fleet is overall getting more or less efficient

          Yeah, sure, but no. There are cars no longer on the road, not because nobody wanted them, but that the Manufacturer couldn't afford to make them any longer, because they were so popular that they skewed the CAFE numbers. Cars like the Crown Victoria, a staple of Police and Taxi companies. They are prized for their durability and longevity, and now ... they don't exist.

          And instead of driving Crown Vics, Police have moved to bigger, larger, less efficient SUVs and because they are "Trucks" do not fall under C

          • This isn't completely true. Lots of police departments are using FWD or even RWD cars for their cruisers now: the Impalas and Chargers are both popular. The Charger is a RWD car.

            Yes, there are a lot of big gas-guzzling SUVs used by police, but there's also plenty of much more efficient cars, which are a lot better than those piece-of-shit Crown Vics and Chevy Caprices they used to use. I've driven in both those things, and they were absolutely horrible cars. A modern Charger or Impala is better in every

            • Police cars need to be big so that the rear seat area can be armored to hold a large violent prisoner and keep the police in the front seat safe. How do you do that with a tin can like the Charger?
              • You have a paddy wagon.

                Some people can be crammed into the back seat but the majority of police interaction doesn't require transportation of prisoners. When they do, you call in a van or SUV to pick up the suspect. Most of the paper work can be done from the cruiser so no need to have the cop return to the station for booking the prisoner.

              • WTF? The Charger is a huge car, and has a back seat just like any other police car. Have you never seen one?

                And if that's not good enough, call for a van like the other poster said.

                I guess according to you, none of these police cars exist [allpar.com].

            • Comparing a 90s Caprice to a modern car is pretty silly. They haven't made one in 20 years. The Crown Vics had gone through many upgrades over the years and were/are exceptionally durable, plus the parts are dirt cheap. This economy of scale has not been reached with any other vehicle used in modern fleets as nothing has become essentially a standard across the board like the Crown Vic was.

              • I know I wasn't explicit, but I wasn't comparing a 90s Caprice to a modern car, I was actually comparing it to other 90s cars; even when it was new, it was a piece of shit. So was the Crown Vic, which I've had to drive. It drove terribly, handled terribly, the steering wheel was crooked, it had a cheap and crappy interior, it just wasn't a good car. The Caprice was huge, but didn't even have enough legroom for me at just over 6 feet. These cars were archetypes of everything that was wrong with American

          • The problem is that there are multiple classes of vehicle for the CAFE standards. What we should be doing is having ONE pool of all the consumer vehicles that a company makes and requiring them to meet a standard. If that requires the company to change its mix of vehicles, and make fewer SUVs and more small cars, so be it. And if they have to cut the price of the small cars and raise the price of the SUVs to get the demand in alignment with the supply, even better.

            I would put work vehicles (ones that are ac

        • But there is still a legitimate argument against CAFE. You're forcing the manufacturers to produce a car with better CAFE ratings every year, but that won't always result in better ratings on newer cycles or in real world use. My new car is rated 23/32, but actually sees about 26 with my driving. Most owners can't even break 23. When driven to get top marks on a CAFE test (which I have only done once in my car on a long drive), it netted slightly over 40.

          Wouldn't it be better if they focused on real-world r

        • and Japanese cars by the laughable 10-15 cycle, where the highest speed involved in the whole cycle is 70 kph (under 45 mph), with an average speed 1/3rd of that.

          What are actual driving conditions like in Japan? What are actual driving speeds?

          The last time I saw anything about driving in Japan, it was a footnote to a programme that pointed out that before you could buy a car from any Tokyo dealership, you had to present them with your parking permit. No parking place? No car. One parking place, it displays

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      Best real world data is probably available from Fuelly [fuelly.com], even though it may need some clean-up for fuel type and sub-model it can at least give you a decent idea of how well a certain model fares. Unfortunately some models have a limited number of samples even there.

      But actual driving data is more relevant when selecting a vehicle than the manufacturer figures even if the number of samples is low.

  • Could the EPA actually drive the cars in cities and highways and see how many gallons of gasoline were consumed over how many miles?

    • Re:Research (Score:4, Informative)

      by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:44PM (#52550499)

      Too subject to variation cause by the drivers. Even the weather and temperature on the day would have a huge impact. All car manufacturers would be insisting their cars were tested on the coldest, highest humidity, but no rain and no wind day.

    • Drivers already do this, and there is a high correlation to driver experiences with mileage to the listed EPA mileage estimates. Sure, it's not extremely accurate and is variable based upon the driver, but it is still reliable information for the consumer. It's wrong to say there's "no valid information", which makes it seem like the EPA just makes up numbers and consumers were too stupid to verify them.

      • May be something worth crowd sourcing. My 2 cars have average mpg over time displays. Set up a small site asking for car make/model/year approximate number of miles, reported mpg and a rough description on driving style (how much highway w/ cruise vs. city w/ light to medium traffic vs city w/ stop and go). After enough entries for a particular make/model/year it should be pretty easy to see just how off the EPA "as advertised" numbers are.

        FWIW my 2013 Nissan Versa is reporting 39.3mpg average over the p

      • Sure, it's not extremely accurate and is variable based upon the driver, but it is still reliable information for the consumer.

        Which is why at base, I have a pretty good idea that a car with a higher sticker mpg will get better gas mieage than one with a lower sticker rating.

        • by Latent Heat ( 558884 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @10:13PM (#52551479)

          The EPA tests were originally developed to quantify pollution generated by cars in the L.A. area, and using those tests to quantify gas mileage came later.

          The EPA city cycle was not meant to represent the stop-and-go driving in Manhattan during rush hour. Rather, it was intended to be typical of an automobile trip in the L.A. area conducted on "surface streets", meaning major arterial roads that have stop lights and are not freeways. The average speed of that cycle is about 20 MPH. The EPA highway cycle was not meant to represent bombing down an open Interstate at 10-over a 70 MPH speed limit. Instead, it was to represent a trip on the 405 freeway in Los Angeles in the days before that road became a parking lot -- the test was meant to represent "moderate traffic" levels where the average speed is about 50 MPH.

          Not only may your miles-per-gallon vary, the amount of BTUs in a gallon of gas can also vary downward from an alcohol-free summer blend that was probably the standard for the test -- the test conducted on rollers somewhere in Ann Arbor, MI doesn't actually measure the quantity of fuel used but instead measures the combustion products out the tailpipe and performs a mass balance with that standardized gasoline.

          Taking the lower BTU fuel you may be getting into account, if you start the car engine from cold on a 70 deg-F day, don't run the A/C, and drive for about 10 miles in traffic where you average 20 MPH, you will roughly reproduce a city test, and I have found that the reading on a Scan Gauge, calibrated to tank fills, will get within 5 percent of the raw city numbers available here https://www3.epa.gov/otaq/tcld... [epa.gov]. These numbers are considerable higher than the window sticker MPG rating available here https://www.fueleconomy.gov/ [fueleconomy.gov]. Driving on a not-that-hilly road (do this in both directions and take a harmonic average to compensate for net elevation change) on a 70-deg calm-wind day with the A/C off at a constant 55 MPH, if you can do that with angering other drivers, is a good proxy for the EPA highway test and will also get you within 5 percent.

          "But no one drives that way!" someone will shout at you, and this may be true, but if you want to reproduce the EPA test conditions to see if you can match the (raw) EPA numbers, this is the way to check that.

          The sticker MPG at fueleconomy.gov has had more than one "adjustment" performed to down rate it from the raw MPG. This was done because the published EPA ratings made people who considered themselves to be "good drivers" feel bad about themselves and their expensive new car purchases, and we cannot have any of that. Or rather, the "consumer" gas mileage numbers were proportionately reduced to "better reflect how real-world driving conditions on more congested city streets and with higher speed limits on highways affect mileage" whereas the Federal Test Procedure and the raw numbers for computing CAFE (corporate average fuel economy) were left the same so as to not keep changing the rules to which the car companies had to comply.

          Now the down-adjusting is based on fleet averages, and your car may vary. A case in point is that Consumer Reports praised the Ford C-Max hybrid as being a lot more "fun to drive" than the Toyota Prius but slammed it for being much further off the EPA sticker in real-world driving than the Prius. Well, duh, Consumer Reports! Were you to drive both vehicles in a true "EPA city granny cycle", they probably would get proportionately higher than the window sticker as is the raw "test car" number. But left to the lead foot of a "normal driver", the C-Max with its bigger gas engine will indeed accelerate better yet use more gas than the small-engine sluggish Prius.

          I also expect "eco-cars" like the Prius to suffer more from "normal driver" in relation to EPA test cycle driving because their power plants are more matched to the "granny cycle." A real "muscle car" may suffer le

          • Well duh, consumer reports knows this! That's why they provide feedback about the disparities between cars and their EPA stickers and point out which ones comes closest. That's one of the points of their reviews. You would know this if you paid attention.
            • Consumer Reports provides such feedback regarding disparity between their gas mileage test and EPA stickers only occasionally, such as with their evaluation of the C-Max. If they give a table for the cars they review somewhere in some issue as to "EPA sticker", "Consumer Reports road test", and "percent disparity", I would like to know where that table is. The impression I get is that 1) they regard their road test as a "ground truth" for fuel economy and think of the EPA numbers as "made up", 2) if a re

            • Well duh, consumer reports knows this!

              Latent Heat gives a nice informative post with facts, figures and links, and you totally demolish it with a superbly timed:

              Well duh

              The kind of insightful incisive post that is becoming the norm for Slashdot

              and Youtube comments.

              Come on - you can do better.

    • Absolutely not.

      You need the same route and the same driving pattern for the comparison to be meaningful.

      In an actual city, traffic comes and goes. A route may be unavailable for months due to construction. And real-world driving is inherently reactive since you have to deal with other drivers. There is no way to put each vehicle through the exact same trial.

      Basically, it is impossible to have a controlled environment in a real city. But you can drive on testing grounds following a pattern with stops, starts

  • LOL (Score:5, Funny)

    by Captain Splendid ( 673276 ) <`capsplendid' `at' `gmail.com'> on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:38PM (#52550463) Homepage Journal
    "Companies are forced to spend billions on this regulation"

    Well, not VW...
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Stupidly editorialized summary. On one hand we have complaints about big government but then saying they should have done more studies (wonder what side of this "debate" won't fund studies). A whole bunch of links to shit websites. I don't remember anyone claiming government standards are a perfect analogy to the real world but they do offer an excellent standard to compare different models and manufacturers against and a fair comparison to legislate against.

  • Factual error (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:45PM (#52550509)

    The article makes a glaring error when it says "When the EPA tests for CAFE compliance...". EPA does no such thing...EPA tests for the numbers that go on window stickers. CAFE testing is the responsibility of NHTSA, not EPA. Some may think this is nit picking, but I find it hard to take this article seriously if the author is not even aware of who does which testing.

  • EPA MPG != CAGE MPG (Score:5, Informative)

    by pavon ( 30274 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:50PM (#52550531)

    The gas mileage numbers that the EPA requires on new car window stickers are not determined the same way as the gas mileage used for CAFE fleet efficiency regulations. The former isn't perfect, but is a lot closer to real world performance than CAFE is.

    • Neither are supposed to measure real-world mileage. The EPA MPG figures are closer since they're meant for car buyers to use to comparison-shop. But every sticker includes the disclaimer, "Actual results will vary for many reasons including driving conditions and how you drive and maintain your vehicle." And every now and then the EPA revamps their tests to reflect changes in how people drive (resulting in all old MPG ratings needing an * next to them). The last update increased top highway speed from 55
      • Thanks for the details on that.

        So CAFE is kind of like our Unemployment Rate; not really a good indicator of anything, but it's a consistent baseline to compare a bad standard from year to year.

        • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

          by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

          So CAFE is kind of like our Unemployment Rate; not really a good indicator of anything, but it's a consistent baseline to compare a bad standard from year to year.

          In the US, the Unemployment Rate is manipulated regularly to make things look "not as bad". The real number that people should look at is employed labor. That number has been dropping steadily since its peak in the 80s, IIRC, and is now hovering near 60% of the labor force.

          • by Myen ( 734499 )

            I was curious, and looked it up on the Bureau of Labor and Statistics [bls.gov] website. If I'm reading that right, Civilian Labor Force, Employed, Percent of Population peaked in 2000 at 64.4%, which is 5% higher than 2000 levels.

            Looking at the wikipedia definitions [wikipedia.org] (especially that third image), I think the interesting metric is the employment-to-population ratio [bls.gov] (i.e. all employed people over all people, eligible to work or not). That default view does show a 5% drop since about mid-2008 that never recovered. It

          • Employed labor is a percentage of the total population that is employed, but doesn't correct for those above and below the working age. The only people who push it are people who want to reinstate child labor and those who think people should never retire.

            The correct stat to use is the U6 - The unemployed and under employed stat.

            • Except that stat is also subject to dropping people out of the pool. If you're unemployed more than some amount of time, they consider you no longer part of the labor pool.

              The numbers shouldn't be cooked. A raw percentage of working-age adults (perhaps with a breakdown by age group) that are employed and their full/part-time status would be far more useful than the numbers we get.

        • It's a standard test that applies uniformly among car manufacturers. It's reliable. What you are asking for is information that the test does not provide. You would need a other tests that would SIMULATE different driving conditions.
      • Neither are supposed to measure real-world mileage.

        A useful test needs to be standardized, and doing so while accounting for 'real world' conditions becomes difficult and even more expensive than the existing system. The best you can hope for is that they have some relative correlation with fuel efficiency from car to car. Its easy to criticize and point out flaws in the existing approach, but try proposing a test that is repeatable, standardized, and reflects real world conditions. And make sure you are very specific about exactly what you will measure, wh

    • I think the OP is showing an agenda; "Government can't do anything right." Well, there is a lot of inefficiency at various government agencies, they aren't all the same.

      There are sometimes some stupid regulations, but we need SOMETHING to improve gas mileage. The EPA was getting defunded and staffed by hacks during the Bush administration. I'm pretty sure "funding" for regulatory agencies has not been an easy sell since then. But damn, I need the EPA and FDA to function because I need to breathe and I need

  • by Mike Hicks ( 244 ) <hick0088@tc.umn.edu> on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:51PM (#52550535) Homepage Journal

    I'm disappointed that this was posted with such a ridiculous assertion in the headline. Are you kidding me? Certainly the tests aren't entirely accurate, and I've complained about them, but saying that there's "No Valid Information At All" is bogus. Obviously you can go to the fueleconomy.gov site and see that there's a correlation between big, heavy, overpowered cars using lots of fuel and smaller, lighter, lower-powered cars that sip gas. The EPA has updated their tests a couple of times, most recently around 2007 following controversies that the Toyota Prius didn't achieve real-world fuel economy as good as what was on the window sticker. They also didn't try to factor in air conditioning or other features that are now common on cars.

    The original 1970s-style tests produce numbers about 30% better than the end result today (an adjustment around 1985 reduced MPG numbers by about 15%, and the second one around 2007 brought it down by another 15%). Notably, government fuel economy tests in Europe and Japan still have ridiculously optimistic figures, so U.S. figures are much, much more accurate and reasonable compared to other places around the world.

    Are EPA figures perfect? No. I personally think they went a bit too far in the most recent adjustment, since my (pre-dieselgate era) 2006 VW Jetta TDI gets MPG figures almost exactly matching what it originally had on the window sticker when I bought it.

    And if this is all about people expecting to get super MPG when driving at 90 mph all the time, just stop complaining. That's not an appropriate expectation for what you should get out of these tests.

    • The assertion appears to be, basically, that we're spending a lot on enforcing it, but not on doing a formal study where we follow a bunch of cars around and see what the MPG actually is in real-world conditions--which actually feeds into your own complaint about the most recent adjustment, since that sort of study would provide empirical data on what the correct adjustments ought to be. You might find out that things like that the adjustments ought to be different depending on the manufacturer, because th

      • Good luck with real world tests. What are the parameters? Stop and think about all the different driving conditions (hint: it's alot). Then run a car through all those tests. So yeah real world tests would be helpful but not easily performed for a basis of comparison.
    • News for nerds? Not so much. If I was looking for political commentary in news headlines I would look elsewhere. With stories like this, when looking for technology news it seems I should look elsewhere as well.
      • by MouseR ( 3264 )

        Nerds can comment on the technological hurdles in parameterizing a standard test that would have to apply with equal margin of error to a wide variety of devices (cars). Compare bench testing.

        It's also widely reported that the EPA numbers for MPG-e are somewhat dubious and hard to correlated to various EVs but it's a pretty good rule of thumb.

        I dont think nerds should be confined to rebooting their PCs or building the next kernel.

        I think we have aptitudes reaching out many aspect of lives.

        As for your not wa

        • Given the editorial near the end of the summary:

          "Other than that, everything is fine. Companies are forced to spend billions on this regulation, the costs of which they immediately pass on to consumers, all based on fantasy and a badly-written law. Gee, I'm sure glad we never tried this with healthcare!"

          The focus is redirected sharply from technological discussion to political diatribe near the end of the submission. I'm a chemical engineer with longtime experience in the fuel industry. As such I fully agree with your statement that nerdiness is not constrained to computers. However, I believe the right-wing rhetoric is distraction from technical discussion, as evidenced by the large fraction of non-technical replies to the post which instead address the pol

          • by MouseR ( 3264 )

            Points taken. It initially sounded as a wider "political stories being submitted to /." to my second-language ear.

    • by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
      A given buyer usually doesn't use the numbers to learn that a full-size truck uses less fuel than a midsize sedan, they use them to compare the vehicles they are considering buying to each other, which are almost always vehicles of the same class. The assertion is that picking the lowest window sticker MPG among a group of vehicles in the same class is no better than guessing, and I wholeheartedly agree with it.
  • by raddan ( 519638 ) * on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:04PM (#52550589)
    Slashdot editors: how did this garbage get posted here? Why not go straight to the quoted Wired article with the hyperbolic title [wired.com]?

    Interestingly, that article contradicts itself: "a 2013 Consumer Reports study tested more than 300 cars, and found 90 percent landed within two miles per gallon of their EPA-approved ratings."

    Yeah, testing standards aren't perfect. That doesn't mean that the government is incompetent and is trying to fuck you.
    • That doesn't mean that the government is incompetent and is trying to fuck you.

      It is only incompetent if it fails to do so.

      But that wasn't a summary up there, it's an editorial, and it is election season, so you know, it's a story for the human torch. How many gallons does he burn an hour?

    • by Nethemas the Great ( 909900 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:20PM (#52550661)
      BeauHD seems to like his hyperbole, and is still quite wet behind the ears. His naivete is amusing at times, but it'd be nice if he did a bit of background work and moderated the tone before posting all these "New law will shore up the USPS by taxing emails" type submissions.
    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      The best available data comes from consumers who report it to the DOT [wired.com] (WARNING: Source may be paywalled)

      Why not go straight to the quoted Wired article with the hyperbolic title [wired.com]?

      Those are the same link. And when viewed through Firefox Tracking Protection, with no specific ad-blocking extensions installed, the text of said hyperbolic article is as follows (screenshot [harvard.edu]):

      Here’s The Thing With Ad Blockers

      We get it: Ads aren’t what you’re here for. But ads help us keep the lights on.
      So, add us to your ad blocker’s whitelist [wired.com] or pay $1 per week for an ad-free version of WIRED. Either way, you are supporting our journalism. We’d really appreciate it.

      From the p

    • Excellent comment. The Wired article was interesting. The tin foil hat guy's rant - not so much.
  • The EPA test is run at low intensity/throttle. The turbo is designed so it won't kick in during the test. As long as the turbo isn't spooled up, the engine isn't using much gas. On the road, under real world conditions, you get good performance, but the turbo causes the engine use lots of gas.

    I'm not a car expert. This is what was explained to me. The person was in the auto industry, but may have been confused.

    • I thought Turbos increased efficiency more than they reduce it. They should in most cases - they are reclaiming some of the otherwise lost energy from exhaust gas...

      • by ebonum ( 830686 )

        Yes. Turbos should give you more power per unit of gas. All thinks being equal.
        Running during the EPA test you are off turbo, low rpm, low horsepower - say 50hp. You are less efficient, but you are not using a lot of fuel. In the real world, on turbo you are higher rpm, higher horsepower say 250hp. You are more efficient, but you are using a lot more fuel.

        The key while driving to getting the EPA's published number is keep acceleration low enough that the turbo doesn't kick in. If you allow the turbo t

  • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @07:41PM (#52550789)

    To those thinking the EPA should just drive the cars, even that won't actually get very accurate results. Real-world fuel efficiency depends on so many factors that it would be impossible to reliably and accurately measure them all. For example, so-called hyper-miler enthusiast employ driving techniques to maximize their fuel efficiency. Conversely an aggressive driver could easily drop fuel economy in half. Then we have differences in temperatures, altitude, and terrain across the country.

    So with that in mind, I think the current, 40-year old testing regime is probably still our best bet. It may not tell you how much fuel economy *you* will get, but since it's done under very controlled and consistent circumstances, it can give an indication to you how it will do relative to other cars. Honestly that's the best we should expect.

    I fear we're going to meet the same problem with "real-world" emissions testing. I don't know of any car out there that can meet standards all the time. Take the cleanest car and get it to accelerate up a grade and it will dump pollutants. Or punch it off the light and you'll dump a lot more NOx and particulates than if you accelerate at a more reasonable rate.

    In short, "real-world testing" is fairly meaningless. The only way to actually accomplish this is to have sensors and recorders on every car all the time and measure it and average it over time (and after the fact).

    • In short, "real-world testing" is fairly meaningless. The only way to actually accomplish this is to have sensors and recorders on every car all the time and measure it and average it over time (and after the fact).

      There's nothing inherently wrong with that, though. Most of us are already having our mileage recorded by our insurance company every six months. It hardly seems an awful violation of privacy if someone also recorded our fuel consumption. It might be a reasonable way to carbon tax vehicles without having to put a GPS on the vehicle. You would need a meaningful speedometer correction regime to get good numbers without GPS, though. One way to do that would be a road-facing optical sensor, which can be install

      • by j33px0r ( 722130 )

        The only way to actually accomplish this is to have sensors and recorders on every car all the time and measure it and average it over time (and after the fact).

        There's nothing inherently wrong with that, though.

        Huh? Nothing wrong with that? Perhaps you might reconsider. At what point do you draw the line on people tracking your activities? Driving? Walking? Brushing teeth? Personal bathroom time? Need I continue?

        Most of us are already having our mileage recorded by our insurance company every six months.

        What insurance company are you using? I've seen the progressive insurance ads but no one I know has told me about allowing an insurance company to put a GPS tracker in their car for mileage, distance, speed, areas traveled, etc. nor the perks from doing so. There are much better insurance companies

  • Since these tests were implimented the EPA has made it clear that they are for comparison and not expected to match a given user's real world results. If you look at car ads from the late seventies and early eighties you will see the following sentence in each one: "EPA estimates for comparison only. Your milage may vary with trip length, speed and weather. Actual highway mileage will probably be less."

    The EPA tests could probably use an update, but they were designed intelligently to provide useful results

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Here's the clickbait headline/summary:

    Wired: The EPA’s Fuel Efficiency Testing May Not Work. Like, at All
    Slashdot: The tests the EPA uses to establish the fuel efficiency of cars are unreliable, and likely provide no valid information at all about the fuel efficiency of the cars tested.

    Here's the relevant section from TFA:

    Except it isn’t. The mileage reported on those window stickers? Probably fine. But when it comes to CAFE, the system is bonkers. When the EPA tests for CAFE compliance, it still uses that laughable two-cycle system. It’s got no choice: The 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act specifies that “the Administrator shall use the same procedures for passenger automobiles the Administrator used for model year 1975.”

    Huh? CAFE is a metric covering an automaker's overall accountability on fuel economy, based on their sales mix. The window stickers are what consumers use to as an (incomplete) gui

  • Worse yet is that the tests are based on 100% gasoline. But meanwhile the congress is passing laws that effectively force (or at least subsidize) the fuel companies to sell up 90% gasoline contaminated with 10% alcohol. I'm sure someone with no real knowledge about this will want to post how there is "only" a 3% energy content difference, but in my experience that is complete bullshit. You can still buy 100% gasoline if you are willing to pay a premium for it (see http://www.pure-gas.org/ [pure-gas.org]) but that premium

    • What are you talking about, E85 is awesome. I have a boosted S2000, with an AEM ecu, and ethanol sensor. On E85, it cranks the stoichiometric ratio up 30%, and it know E85 has about a 115 octane rating. That means I can safely run at 30 lbs of boost, and I've put down over 500hp at the wheels out of a 2 liter engine. E85 also caries significant amount of heat away, so your heads and valves run much cooler.
      • Other people with similar setups are putting down almost 700HP at the wheels on E85. I've detonate numerous engines on pure gas, but I've never grenaded an engine on E85. E85 is the way to safe, reliable horsepower.
      • Nitromethane is even better for squeezing power out of a small internal combustion engine. Some people running on nitromethane get more than 8000 HP out of a pushrod V8, and they don't need any cooling system at all.

        Therefore, everybody should be using top fuel in their cars.

        • Nitro is cool, you run at crazy high stoichiometric ratios. But it's EXPENSIVE, and nitro engines don't last long. Nitro produces nitric acid as part of combustion, this would rapidly eat away engine components. That's why nitro is pretty much only used in drag racing where an engine only needs to last a few seconds.

          For longevity, reliability and power, E85 is a really the best way to go.
  • I know we love to cater to conservative critiques of government here, but that was not even slightly useful in the realm of criticism. If you don't like the EPA tests, then propose a better one that would be usable across all the cars sold in the US today. Yeah, there are certainly problems with it but the EPA numbers - even if they are not particularly useful on their own - can at least be useful to compare two cars to each other. They are particularly useful for some of the 4 cylinder cars out there th
  • My primary criticism of the MPG numbers is that gallons per 100 miles would be a more useful number (someone else pointed this out on slashdot a few years ago). At better than 10 MPG/10 GP100M, the MPG number is perfectly adequate. Once the MPG rating gets over 20 MPG it becomes deceptive. The cost of gas difference between 5 MPG and 10 MPG is greater than the cost of gas difference between 10 MPG and 40 MPG, but most people would value the latter jump more than the former. That is, they would be more likel
  • https://www.wired.com/2016/07/... [wired.com]

    Not clicking on a link to Hot Air.

  • Nissan Versa 38HWY, 28CITY, average of my mostly highway100+ mile commute was around 35MPG. 92% of HWY rating.

    Nissan Rogue 32HWY, 25CITY, average of the same commute, 24MPG. 75% of the HWY rating. Heck, it's only 96% of the CITY rating.

    Frankly, I would of consider other vehicles if I knew the real world mileage would be that low. Also, Nissan reliability sucks. The EPA lets the car companies test and set, but doesn't hold them accountable. You can go to fueleconomy.gov and see that Nissan Rogue ratings by c

  • These days, computer-controlled engines pretty much eliminate the need for catalytic converters which were mandated in the 70s. Regulation never matches the state of technology.

  • you mean that huge 5000+ lb super duty truck with the huge engine rated at 9 mpg might actually have higher mpg than the 2500 lb commuter car with the 1.8 liter 100 horsepower rated at 35 mpg? wow.

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