Coasting: In gear vs. Neutral...
I've been meaning to post this for some time. This discussion is primarily for us 5MT folks, but I suppose it has some relevancy to the CVT folks also. Just easier for a 5MT driver.
As of late, I have noticed that my mpg has taken a fairly sharp uptick when, instead of just letting off the gas pedal way early and coasting it down in-gear, that I push in the clutch and pop it into Neutral. I try to put it into Neutral even before I'd let off the gas pedal early to coast down in-gear.
Without getting into how bezerk all the tailgaters go, who are apparently eager to minimize their mpg & brake life, I am surprised by this sharp uptick.
I have been under the assumptition that when I'm rolling along at say 2,750 rpm in 5th gear, and I let off the gas pedal, that the engine goes to a state of zero gasoline injection either at the instant I let off, or sometime soon after I let off. But now I think this is wrong, based on my mpg improvement from coasting in Neutral. I would have bet coasting in-gear would have resulted in the higher mpg results, I would have lost that bet.
As I understand, this zero fuel input when letting off the gas in gear IS TRUE for my diesel truck. My diesel (and maybe all diesels) has no throttle valve in the intake. So there's less engine braking based on vacuum with off-throttle "coasting" in my diesel. Any little input of fuel in gear while off-throttle coasting and a diesel might "coast" a hundred miles (I exaggerate for effect) due to having no throttle valve.
Of course our 3-tapper has a throttle valve. And now (after realizing this uptick) I suppose it must be injecting some really small amounts of fuel even when off throttle coasting down in gear, or I wouldn't be seeing such an uptick in mpg. I'll add that what I'm doing is sort of like what hyper-milers call pulse and glide. I'm doing the "glide" part of that, and only pulse IF whatever impediment way out in front clears up. I'm not going to be pulsing and gliding on the regular, that's annoying (for me) as all hell, I can't imagine how annoying it would be for traffic behind. But when a known or dynamic slow down is coming, I hit Neutral as quick as I can and let it slowly coast down.
Can anyone who is familiar explain why I (we) get such an uptick from this? Was I wrong about the coasting down IN GEAR with zero fuel input? I realize that when I pop into Neutral, it is injecting enough fuel to idle the engine. But at ~700 rpm and no throttle input, it is consuming only a tiny amount of fuel. I'm liking this uptick. I'd say I'm able to increase my around town mpg by 3 or 4 mpg. I can hit 50 - 52 mpg on the display regularly, which works out to about 47 mpg (versus 43 mpg). I'm pleasantly surprised with this.
And just wanted to know if you other 5MT drivers have already been doing this, stumbled upon it like me, have never tried it, and/or have a more thorough explanation as to the difference in fuel consumption between in-gear coasting and Neutral coasting.
All input and thread digression welcome! Thanks!
7milesout
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View my fuel log 2020 Mirage ES 1.2 manual: 42.3 mpg (US) ... 18.0 km/L ... 5.6 L/100 km ... 50.8 mpg (Imp)