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Nolan Motors Balbriggan Fuel-saving driving tips.



Fuel-efficient driving can save you hundreds of Euros in fuel each year, improve road safety and prevent wear on your vehicle. Adopt these 5 fuel-efficient driving techniques to lower your vehicle’s fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions by as much as 25%.



Gentle acceleration


The harder you accelerate the more fuel you use. In the city, you can use less fuel by easing onto the accelerator pedal gently. To be as fuel-efficient as possible, take 5 seconds to accelerate your vehicle up to 20 kilometres per hour from a stop. Imagine an open cup of coffee on the dashboard. Don’t spill it!


Maintain a steady speed


When your speed dips and bursts, you use more fuel, and spend more money, than you need to. Tests have shown that varying your speed up and down between 75 and 85 km per hour every 18 seconds can increase your fuel use by 20%.

Consider using cruise control for motorway driving, where conditions permit. Be mindful, however, that little variations in speed can actually be good when gravity does the work. Where traffic patterns permit, allow your speed to drop when you travel uphill, then regain your momentum as you move downhill.

Anticipate traffic


Look ahead while you’re driving to see what is coming up. And keep a comfortable distance between your vehicle and the one in front of you. By looking closely at what pedestrians and other cars are doing, and imagining what they’ll do next, you can keep your speed as steady as possible and use less fuel. It’s also safer to drive this way.




Avoid high speeds


Keep to the speed limit and save on fuel! Most cars, vans, pickup trucks and SUVs are most fuel-efficient when they’re travelling between 50 and 80 km per hour. Above this speed zone, vehicles use increasingly more fuel the faster they go.

For example, at 120 km per hour, a vehicle uses about 20% more fuel than at 100 km per hour. On a 25-km trip, this spike in speed – and fuel consumption – would cut just two minutes from your travel time.


Ease off to decelerate


Every time you use your brakes, you waste your forward momentum. By looking ahead at how traffic is behaving, you can often see well in advance when it’s time to slow down. You will conserve fuel and save money by taking your foot off the accelerator and coasting to slow down instead of using your brakes.


More ways to use less fuel


Here are more easy ways you can reduce your fuel consumption and costs:


Avoid idling your vehicle

Turn off your engine when you’re stopped for more than 60 seconds, except when in traffic. The average vehicle with a 3-litre engine wastes 300 millilitres (over 1 cup) of fuel for every 10 minutes it idles.


Measure your tyre pressure every month

Driving a vehicle with tyres under-inflated by 56 kilopascals (8 pounds per square inch) can increase fuel consumption by up to 4%. It can also reduce the life of your tyres by more than 10,000 kilometres. Find the right tyre pressure for your vehicle on the tyre information placard. It’s usually on the edge of the driver’s door or doorpost.


Use a manual transmission properly

Pay attention to the tachometer, which shows engine speed. Use it to know when to shift a manual transmission for the best fuel efficiency. The higher the rpm, the more fuel the engine is burning. So shift through the lower gears smoothly and quickly, and build up speed in the higher gears.



Don’t carry unnecessary weight

Remove items such as sports equipment from your vehicle. The less it weighs, the less fuel your vehicle will use. The fuel consumption of a mid-size car increases by about 1% for every 25 kilograms of weight it carries.


Remove roof or bicycle racks

Streamline your vehicle by taking off the racks when you’re not using them. Aerodynamic drag can increase fuel consumption by as much as 20% on the moterway.


Use air conditioning sparingly

Air conditioning can increase a vehicle’s fuel consumption by as much as 20%. Open the windows when you’re driving in the city, and use the flow-through ventilation system with the windows up on the motorway. If you do use air conditioning, use the re-circulate option. It will minimize the impact.


Use a fuel consumption display

See the impact of these fuel-efficient driving techniques firsthand with the help of a fuel consumption display, a feature now standard on many vehicles. (Some newer vehicles come equipped with even more sophisticated displays that analyze speed variations, shift points for manual transmissions, and driving behaviours such as acceleration and braking times.)


Many drivers consume 15% less fuel by acting on the feedback that fuel consumption displays provide.


Track your fuel consumption

How long can you go without filling your tank? Two weeks? A month?


Challenge yourself to refill as seldom as possible and your monthly costs will come down.


Plan ahead

Map out your route, especially if it’s long

Listen to traffic reports and avoid accidents, road construction and other trouble spots

Avoid roads that cut through major cities and are dotted with stoplights, intersections and pedestrians



Drive less

The best way reduce fuel consumption is to drive less.


Walk or bike to your destination. You’ll use no fuel and have a healthier lifestyle


Use public transit

Join a car or van pool. You and your group will save fuel and avoid emitting tonnes of air pollutants a year

Work from home when you can. Every day you remote work reduces the amount of fuel you use by 20%

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