The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Mustang muscle car triumphs in fuel economy marathon

- jackmckeow­n moToring ediTor jmckeown@thecourier.co.uk

A Ford Mustang emerged as the unlikely winner of a fuel economy challenge.

The five-litre all-American muscle car bettered its official economy figure by more than 75% in the annual MPG Marathon.

The Mustang, driven by Andy Dawson and Andy Marriott, achieved an overall MPG figure of 36.6mpg against a manufactur­er’s combined figure of 20.9mpg. That’s an improvemen­t of 75.12%, the biggest increase in efficiency in the event’s history.

Drivers were charged with working out the most economical route between a number of waypoints in Oxfordshir­e, Warwickshi­re, Shropshire, Northants and Gloucester­shire over the two-day event.

The best overall MPG figure from a convention­al internal combustion engine car was 88.87mpg, achieved by John Kerswill and Ian McKean in a Mazda 2 1.6d Sports Nav, an improvemen­t of 5.77mpg over the manufactur­er’s claimed figure.

The highest overall figure was achieved by a pre-production Toyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid, with 109.14mpg achieved over the 387-mile route.

This equates to just £14.63-worth of fuel to drive a route equivalent to the distance between London and Glasgow by road.

As well as convention­al cars a number of quirky and offbeat vehicles took part in the challenge.

These included a fuel cell-powered Hyundai iX35 jointly entered by Birmingham University and Lex Autolease, a 750cc Moto Guzzi motorcycle, which achieved 86.87mpg and an Australian-made V8-engined Vauxhall VXR Maloo “Ute”.

Event organiser Jerry Ramsdale said: “The achievemen­t of the crew in the Ford Mustang was astonishin­g and it shows that even the most potent performanc­e cars can be relatively economical if driven sensibly.

“The diversity of vehicles in the event this year was tremendous.”

 ??  ?? The five-litre Ford Mustang improved on its official fuel economy by more than 75%.
The five-litre Ford Mustang improved on its official fuel economy by more than 75%.

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