Daily News

We expose the old wives’ tales about driving economical­ly

- IOL MOTORING STAFF

AS THE cost of fuel takes a bite out of everybody’s budget, old wives’ tales about how to get the most mileage out of your fuel are resurfacin­g.

Some are complete nonsense, says Motor Industry Workshop Associatio­n director Vishal Premlall, while others may have held a grain of truth in the bad old days of carburetto­rs and mechanical ignition, but simply don’t apply to modern cars with computer-controlled fuel-injection and engine management systems.

He unpacks some of the more commonly heard fuel-saving myths:

SHIFTING INTO NEUTRAL AT STOPS The moment you take your foot off the accelerato­r of a modern car with computeris­ed fuel-injection, it switches automatica­lly to ‘idle’ mode, with the injectors supplying just enough fuel to keep the engine ticking over - so there are no savings to be had there.

While there is something to be said for being able to release the clutch and unload the release bearing of a manual gearbox, on any car with an auto transmissi­on The ultimate fuel saving device - your right foot. all you’re achieving by constantly popping in and out of gear, is extra wear on the shift mechanism. CRUISING DOWNHILL

IN NEUTRAL This, says Premlall, is one of the most misleading old wives’ tales - because whether you’re coasting down a hill or sitting in traffic, as long as your right foot is off the loud pedal, the car is in ‘idle’ mode and using exactly the same, minutely calibrated amount of fuel.

On a car that has energy regenerati­on it can actually cost you a teaspoonfu­l or two of petrol because you’re throwing away the savings brought about by using gravity, rather than engine power, to drive the alternator. A DIRTY AIR FILTER CAUSES HIGHER FUEL CONSUMPTIO­N This was actually true in the days when the engine sucked air through the filter into the carburetto­r; a clogged element meant it sucked harder and pulled more fuel out of the carburetto­r.

Today’s fuel-injection manage- ment systems suck the air over a mass airflow sensor that measures exactly how much air the engine is getting and releases precisely the right amount of petrol for optimum fuel-efficiency.

But that’s no excuse for neglecting the air-filter’s service intervals. A dirty air filter can still cause sluggish accelerati­on.

FILLING UP WHEN IT’S COOLER SAVES YOU MONEY

This old story is all the more pernicious because there’s a grain of truth in it. Very cold petrol is indeed marginally denser, and you get more hydrocarbo­n molecules - and therefore more energy - per litre. But the petrol at your local garage is pumped up from a tank so far undergroun­d (for safety reasons) that it is almost totally insulated from ambient temperatur­e changes, so the effect is lost. A FULL TANK IS MORE

FUEL EFFICIENT This one is just plain nonsense. Reducing the airspace above the fuel level will not reduce evaporatio­n - because there isn’t any. Modern fuel-injection systems have a vapour recovery system rather than an open-to-air breather and some even pressurise the fuel-tank to even out the fuel pressure in the system. So any petrol that does evaporate is trapped in the tank and recovered.

FUEL-SAVING DEVICES There are lots of these devices on the market, ranging from magic magnets that are supposed to ‘align’ the molecules in the fuel by an electromag­netic field, to swirl or vortex devices that are fitted to the inlet manifold to smooth out the airflow.

There is no scientific evidence that any of them work, and besides, car companies are under enormous pressure from both government­s and customers to reduce the fuel consumptio­n of their cars - don’t you think that if any of these devices actually worked, they would fit them at the factory?

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