Neverfuel
Well-known member
I think I am losing the plot....
I appreciate that everyone has their own way of working out their fuel consumption figures. But, last month I did a lot of petrol miles compared to EV and I wanted to try and work out the mpg of the engine alone after grid power was removed from the equation (without the aid of sophisticated monitoring devices). What I found shocked me and I think I need some help to see if my figures are correct, or whether I have misinterpreted them.
I always fill up on the last day of the month and always brim the tank and I would normally work out my mpg per tank of fuel like this:
579 miles divided by 38.78 litres = 14.93 miles per litre, times 4.55 litres to the gallon = 67.933 miles per gallon on that tank. (very good, me thinks)
Okay, I then work out what that has cost per mile, and I add in the cost of electricity. My electricity costs me 10.57 pence per KW so I have set the car charging cost at 10 pence to give me a close approximation of what I use on a daily basis.
The car indicated that I had used £17.65 worth of electricity over the month.
The fuel cost me £1.037 (Morrisons) per litre, therefore cost me £40.21. The total cost this month is £56.86, so divided by the mileage of 579 miles, I have a cost per mile figure of 9.82 pence per mile. I then work out what the electricity would have bought me in terms of petrol, in this case £17.65 would have bought 17.02 litres at £1.037. I add the actual litres used (38.78) to the theoretical litres used (17.02), to give a figure of 55.8 litres equivalent. By dividing this into my mileage of 579 and multiplying by 4.55 litres per gallon I get my mpge of 47.21. (not bad, me thinks)
As I said I wanted to do this because I had done a lot more miles on petrol than electric and wanted to compare with the previous months. However, this prompted me to try and work out what the engine actually did by subtracting some conservative estimates of the EV miles based on my electricity use.
£17.65 of electricity at my rate of 10.57 pence per KW is 166.98 KW.
I then subtracted 10% for losses, so now I have 150KW being used by the car. Dividing that by 8.4 KW (the amount to fully recharge above the 30% SOC level), means I have used 17.89 cycles of battery power. If we then say that each cycle will give 20 miles of EV driving - I had 358 miles of EV driving.
Now, I hope I have my figures right. But even though I have not been entirely precise in the amount of losses, I hope most of you can see my point - if I had done 358 miles on EV in the month, then I had only done 579 - 358 miles = 221 miles on petrol, 38.78 litres of the stuff. So I get the engine to be achieving 25.92 mpg. (shocked, me thinks). Now I know it was a heavy month, but that doesn’t look right to me.
I must be doing something wrong, or the charge cost in the MMCS is telling me porkies, but can someone just let me know what I am missing please, as 25.92 mpg seems to big a gap to my 67.933 figure in the first calculation.
:?
I appreciate that everyone has their own way of working out their fuel consumption figures. But, last month I did a lot of petrol miles compared to EV and I wanted to try and work out the mpg of the engine alone after grid power was removed from the equation (without the aid of sophisticated monitoring devices). What I found shocked me and I think I need some help to see if my figures are correct, or whether I have misinterpreted them.
I always fill up on the last day of the month and always brim the tank and I would normally work out my mpg per tank of fuel like this:
579 miles divided by 38.78 litres = 14.93 miles per litre, times 4.55 litres to the gallon = 67.933 miles per gallon on that tank. (very good, me thinks)
Okay, I then work out what that has cost per mile, and I add in the cost of electricity. My electricity costs me 10.57 pence per KW so I have set the car charging cost at 10 pence to give me a close approximation of what I use on a daily basis.
The car indicated that I had used £17.65 worth of electricity over the month.
The fuel cost me £1.037 (Morrisons) per litre, therefore cost me £40.21. The total cost this month is £56.86, so divided by the mileage of 579 miles, I have a cost per mile figure of 9.82 pence per mile. I then work out what the electricity would have bought me in terms of petrol, in this case £17.65 would have bought 17.02 litres at £1.037. I add the actual litres used (38.78) to the theoretical litres used (17.02), to give a figure of 55.8 litres equivalent. By dividing this into my mileage of 579 and multiplying by 4.55 litres per gallon I get my mpge of 47.21. (not bad, me thinks)
As I said I wanted to do this because I had done a lot more miles on petrol than electric and wanted to compare with the previous months. However, this prompted me to try and work out what the engine actually did by subtracting some conservative estimates of the EV miles based on my electricity use.
£17.65 of electricity at my rate of 10.57 pence per KW is 166.98 KW.
I then subtracted 10% for losses, so now I have 150KW being used by the car. Dividing that by 8.4 KW (the amount to fully recharge above the 30% SOC level), means I have used 17.89 cycles of battery power. If we then say that each cycle will give 20 miles of EV driving - I had 358 miles of EV driving.
Now, I hope I have my figures right. But even though I have not been entirely precise in the amount of losses, I hope most of you can see my point - if I had done 358 miles on EV in the month, then I had only done 579 - 358 miles = 221 miles on petrol, 38.78 litres of the stuff. So I get the engine to be achieving 25.92 mpg. (shocked, me thinks). Now I know it was a heavy month, but that doesn’t look right to me.
I must be doing something wrong, or the charge cost in the MMCS is telling me porkies, but can someone just let me know what I am missing please, as 25.92 mpg seems to big a gap to my 67.933 figure in the first calculation.
:?