Greetings,
I have a general question about fuel consumption vs gearing in passenger cars. My current vehicle has a 5 speed automatic (I know, I know, that's a wife thing not a BBT thing trust me) which has a semi-manual mode whereby you bump the shifter forward or backward for shifts. Obviously, that's the way I drive since it's the lesser of two evils.
The few times I've left it in full auto mode, I couldn't help but notice that the shifting is (obviously) very lazy, and seems to be programmed to maintain the lowest RPM possible, even when moderate throttle is applied. When I'm driving, I tend to keep the RPMs in a reasonable operating range, unless I won't be slowing / accelerating for considerable time because the response is so much better. The engine has variable valve timing, but it's still only 2.3L and really doesn't have much down low. Thus, in city driving I often find myself at least one gear lower than the auto would choose on it's own.
Now, I haven't done any scientific testing but anecdotally speaking it SEEMS like I get better gas mileage this way. What I'm not sure I understand properly is the relationship(s) between throttle position and engine RPM vs consumption.
If left to it's own devices, the transmission will often require more throttle for a longer time to induce reasonable acceleration, because it's decide that some bullshit gear ratio is desireable, whereas a lower gear would provide quicker acceleration with LESS throttle application.
Will an engine burn more fuel at lower RPM but much wider throttle, for say 6 seconds, or at higher RPM but less throttle for 33% less time.
I know that's not a precise question, and that there's a lot of variables involved that need to be considered, but I hope it conveys the gist of what I'm getting at.
I have a general question about fuel consumption vs gearing in passenger cars. My current vehicle has a 5 speed automatic (I know, I know, that's a wife thing not a BBT thing trust me) which has a semi-manual mode whereby you bump the shifter forward or backward for shifts. Obviously, that's the way I drive since it's the lesser of two evils.
The few times I've left it in full auto mode, I couldn't help but notice that the shifting is (obviously) very lazy, and seems to be programmed to maintain the lowest RPM possible, even when moderate throttle is applied. When I'm driving, I tend to keep the RPMs in a reasonable operating range, unless I won't be slowing / accelerating for considerable time because the response is so much better. The engine has variable valve timing, but it's still only 2.3L and really doesn't have much down low. Thus, in city driving I often find myself at least one gear lower than the auto would choose on it's own.
Now, I haven't done any scientific testing but anecdotally speaking it SEEMS like I get better gas mileage this way. What I'm not sure I understand properly is the relationship(s) between throttle position and engine RPM vs consumption.
If left to it's own devices, the transmission will often require more throttle for a longer time to induce reasonable acceleration, because it's decide that some bullshit gear ratio is desireable, whereas a lower gear would provide quicker acceleration with LESS throttle application.
Will an engine burn more fuel at lower RPM but much wider throttle, for say 6 seconds, or at higher RPM but less throttle for 33% less time.
I know that's not a precise question, and that there's a lot of variables involved that need to be considered, but I hope it conveys the gist of what I'm getting at.