millhouse
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2016
- Threads
- 18
- Messages
- 2,652
- Reaction score
- 1,217
- Location
- Simpsonville SC
- Vehicle(s)
- 2016 Ruby Red GT PP
He's taking a margin of error for a much longer duration at much different operating conditions and applying it to a much shorter duration with completely different conditions. It's not an assumption, it's bad science.That's an assumption on your part. In my ~8000 miles since buying my 2016 GT last November, I've seen computer numbers as high as 25 to 26 mpg. Most of my local driving averages upper 21's to low 22's. All of my manual calculations have averaged around 1.5 mpg less, give or take, than what the computer says. So your assertion that the error will increase with speed and larger mpg values does not prove true by my experience.
Like Houston Kid said,
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/science-fair/steps-of-the-scientific-methodYou are correct and by that reasoning the error factor would be less fir the 32 mpg test because that was based on a speed of 60 mph. The 17.3 mpg average was based on city driving approx 80 miles slow speed cpu avg of 11 and highway driving the remaining milage at speeds up to 130 mph with an avg around 75 thus increasing the error according to your logic.
"Test Your Hypothesis by Doing an Experiment: Your experiment tests whether your prediction is accurate and thus your hypothesis is supported or not. It is important for your experiment to be a fair test. You conduct a fair test by making sure that you change only one factor at a time while keeping all other conditions the same."
All you have determined is that for the driving conditions that yielded a 17.3mpg average that you have a measured vs calculated delta of 1.5mpg. Again, applying that to a steady state test at 60mph is bad science. Also, naturally speaking, as your speed increases...so will the deviation of your mph and mpg. You are also relying on the MPG to be accurate for all of the acceleration and deceleration which should not be included for your steady state tests.
If you want to do a much more accurate test, fill up....gently accelerate on the freeway, run your 20+ miles, gently decelerate at the exit with a gas station near and fill it back up. It's possible you'll still be off by 1.5 mpg, but don't assume that your previous test is accurate for steady state conditions.
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