Dirk Diggler (09-06-2021)
Eggman (09-07-2021)
Those are great numbers. There are very few vehicles capable of that kind of fuel economy, including motorcycles. What do you think are the contributing factors? Did you keep that speed the whole time? Any tailwind or elevation changes?
Also I see your Eco gauge is a multi-level meter which I think is new for North America?
__________________________________________
View my fuel log 2015 Mirage ES 1.2 manual: 49.6 mpg (US) ... 21.1 km/L ... 4.7 L/100 km ... 59.5 mpg (Imp)
__________________________________________
View my fuel log 2015 Mirage DE 1.2 manual: 48.5 mpg (US) ... 20.6 km/L ... 4.8 L/100 km ... 58.3 mpg (Imp)
__________________________________________
View my fuel log 2015 Mirage DE 1.2 manual: 48.5 mpg (US) ... 20.6 km/L ... 4.8 L/100 km ... 58.3 mpg (Imp)
I got a Honda Super Cub recently and have been riding that as much as possible because it's supposed to get 100-120 MPG. It's one of the most fuel efficient vehicles you can get. However, it has to be absolutely pegged to keep highway speeds, so I think the Mirage actually beats it in terms of MPG for highway cruising - which is hilarious.
I have a CVT in my Mirage, and this MPG was achieved just by getting to 55mph and setting cruise control, leaving the rest to the computer. No tricks for hypermiling or anything like that. Engine just ticked over at ~1800 RPM the whole way. I wasn't using the AC, but I may have still been circulating air, although I can't remember for sure. Interestingly, I was able to watch the MPG climb as the ambient air temperature increased as the morning progressed.
My gauge is actually from the top-trim UK model of the car. I got it and swapped it out because I wanted the ECO gauge, and the UK still uses proper units of measurement. I had to flip a few switches in ETACS in order for the gauge to work, but other than that it was plug-n-play.
I've been seeing whacky-high MPG numbers a lot recently (50's or 60's without really even trying). I actually started seeing the large increase in MPG around when I swapped the gauge a few months ago, to the point that I thought the gauge may have been faulty and reporting the wrong values. But on this trip to Canada I actually was able to run the car for long enough distances that I could verify things at the pump, and: yeah, it's actually getting those numbers. Absolutely blows my mind. Mitsubishi made one hell of a car.
P.S. - On the trip back from Canada, the car got 63.2 MPG. It was colder and rainy that day, which was I think the reason for the decrease. I was going from Seattle to Vancouver, which are both port cities at sea level, so I don't think elevation changes were more pronounced one direction vs the other.
I think we should all get UK Mirage gauges, because it apparently increases your mpg.
I really don't believe anyone gets 70 mpg with a Mirage @ 55 mph, but anything is possible. Something seems off to me?
Could a UK gauge be using imperial gallons for their mpg calculations? An imperial gallon is larger than a U.S. gallon. If calculations were done in miles per imperial gallon, I would expect a slight increase in mpg over a smaller U.S. gallon reading.
You claim an increase in mpg since switching gauges. I doubt your car has changed, but what records it has changed. 70 km/gallon seems realistic, but I don't see them mixing metric/imperial units either.
I think something is off, but you claim the gas pump supports it. Is your car recording miles correctly? That would be my next question.
If Mirages were getting 70 mpg @ 55 mph, more people around the world would be talking about it.
Last edited by Mark; 09-08-2021 at 02:03 AM.
Well after a little cyber-sleuthing I found something interesting.
2014 UK transmission ratios-note the 5th gear ratio .85 and the final drive ratio of 3.55
2021 UK transmission ratios-note the 5th gear ratio is now .804 and the final drive ratio of 3.55 continues
2021 North America ratios- note the 5th gear ratio matches the .804 of the UK version but the NA final drive is 4.055
UK Mirages will be turning much lower rpm's in the same gear at the same speed than the NA Mirages. If their economy is measured in Imperial Gallons that will also make a big difference but someone on the forum here can work the math (it's hard for me) to develop a comparison at the same speed and the same gear to show the differences in rpm.
__________________________________________
View my fuel log 2015 Mirage ES 1.2 automatic: 40.5 mpg (US) ... 17.2 km/L ... 5.8 L/100 km ... 48.6 mpg (Imp)
Aren't we talking about a Mirage in Washington State, & he replaced his dash with one from the UK? I don't think he imported the entire car to the U.S.A.
If Mirages were getting 70 mpg @ 55 mph consistently (or even sometimes), I think more people would take note. I suspect something is off, but I've been wrong before!