At 4 minutes each way you are wasting 8 minutes/day or 40 minutes/week or 2000 minutes a year. That is over 33 hours. Your $200 savings divided by your 33 hours spent earned you a whopping $6/hour.The small difference between windows and AC isn't the problem when you are going fast, where the efficiency is lower. And it doesn't cost you much in time, just a couple of minutes usually, and, moreover, I don't care if I see a cop, because he isn't going to bother with me at 58 mph. In terms of benefit, given two tanks of gas each week, and gas prices of 2 - $2.50, I figure I can save about $4 - $5 a week in gas, or $200 - $250 a year. Just by slowing down.
At 4 minutes each way you are wasting 8 minutes/day or 40 minutes/week or 2000 minutes a year. That is over 33 hours. Your $200 savings divided by your 33 hours spent earned you a whopping $6/hour.
Is it possible that people that drive BELOW the speed limit put themselves and others at risk? In NYC if you are doing 70 in a 55 you may be the slowest person on the road. Even in Iowa driving below the speed limit encourages others to pass when they otherwise wouldn't have to causing unnecessary risk - all for $6/hour.
Full disclaimer: I do not drive.
I can see your point, if you have nowhere to go and all day to get there then a time=money analysis is useless. If, however, you are driving below the speed of traffic to simply save money then cost/benefit analysis may do you some good.For me your analysis is a little faulty. For most of my life I generally drove in the fast lane at around 80 mph. At that speed there is always a little tension around the possibility of a ticket. And as has been noted fuel economy is decreased. Also there may be a little more tension with the drive particularly when driving next to the cement barriers that separate the two directions of freeway traffic. Those all seemed like reasonable tradeoffs when I was working 50 plus hours a week and I was either striving to get to work on time or I was trying to get home as fast as possible because I was tired.
Now, I work a few times a week for roughly five or six hours a day renovating an old apartment building. If I take a little longer getting there or getting home I'm ok with it. I might listen to talk radio, maybe eat a little lunch and pretty soon I'm where I was going. I'm not scanning my rearview mirror looking for cops because I know I'm going slower than a speed that they would ticket, in general I have a nice little peaceful road trip and I save a few pennies on gas. Sometimes that can even be part of the diversion as I try to set a new record for how many miles I get on a tank of gas.
I can see your point, if you have nowhere to go and all day to get there then a time=money analysis is useless. If, however, you are driving below the speed of traffic to simply save money then cost/benefit analysis may do you some good.
kevin said:Also I thought the worry about the tires blowing out was weird. I've done 12 hour drives in cars at 70-80 mph without problems, with only stops for the restroom and lunch.
davefoc said:The only things I do are to keep my tires inflated and to drive with as little braking as possible meaning that I try to be aware of slowing traffic and allow the car to slow itself down before I need to use the brakes.
Cars of the late seventies, early eighties ran very lean mixtures, thereby giving them great economy. This also meant they spewed out great amounts of NOx. With catalystic convertors, Lambda got back to 1 (air:fuel ratio of 14.7:1), this increased the fuel consumption.LTC8K6 said:There was a Sprint Turbo as well. 70 horses, I believe.
We had several cars many years ago that got very high mileage. Geo Metro, Chevy Sprint, Honda Civic HF.
None of them were hybrids, either. We are just now getting back to those numbers, but only with hybrids.
... Cars of the late seventies, early eighties ran very lean mixtures, thereby giving them great economy. This also meant they spewed out great amounts of NOx. With catalystic convertors, Lambda got back to 1 (air:fuel ratio of 14.7:1), this increased the fuel consumption.
As far as I know, the Sprint, Metro, and Civic HF were late 80's and early
90's models with catalysts.
The Civic HF was also a flex fuel vehicle.
I think it was the earlier CVCC that did not use a catalytic converter.
Cars of the late seventies, early eighties ran very lean mixtures, thereby giving them great economy. This also meant they spewed out great amounts of NOx. With catalystic convertors, Lambda got back to 1 (air:fuel ratio of 14.7:1), this increased the fuel consumption.
While the car's emissions got worse over with age, it's also possible that the state's emission standards got tighter over the same period.
I would love the mythbusters to see if you can actually shoot at a lock and chain with a gun and break them. Particularly a chain. I always shudder when they do that in a movie. I expect the bullets would bounce off and hit you if you were standing close.
Just goes to show --- you can't get something for nothing; or perhaps whatever you want must be paid for with something else. One of my favorites was (is?) with oxygenated gasoline -- basically it yielded 10% less pollution, but gave you 10% less mileage. Go figure.
And why are owners of bigger vehicles (SUV's and Trucks) allowed to pollute more? The pollution levels are grams per volume of emitted gases, not grams per mile, right? There is no way you can tell me that an SUV getting 8 mpg is polluting the same amount of grams per mile of NOX and CO as the same model year Civic.