Not exact matches
Not all electric cars can be charged at a rate
of 80 miles per charging hour, but even if they could, achieving 400 miles (the equivalent
of an
average gasoline car
gas tank capacity) would take 5 hours
of charging.
A recent report from Bank
of America Merrill Lynch said that households with an annual income below $ 50,000 spent an
average of 21 %
of their earnings on energy costs, from home heating oil to filling their
gas tanks.
Pros: Fully charged, can run 40 miles on battery power alone; can travel more than 300 miles on a
tank of gas; combined electric and extended - range use will provide an
average of 230 mpg, Chevy claims; connected to a 240V outlet, the battery will charge in less than 3 hours; battery guaranteed for 10 years or 150,000 miles.
I stretched 290 miles out
of the Toyota Highlander's
gas tank, returning an
average of 25... Show full review
Others complain about the fact you need premium
gas to run this car, but the car has a 8.7 gallon
tank and you can get a full weeks worth
of driving before the next fill - up at what i
average 38.9 city driving.
Increasing the
gas tax by, say, just 20 cents per gallon, potentially generating billions in road - repairing funds, would raise the
average cost
of a
tank of fuel by only about $ 3.
I'm
averaging 23.5 mpg and getting about 420 miles on a
tank of gas.
With all the zippy performance, the A4 test vehicle still
averaged a commendable 26 miles per gallon in combined city / highway travel, which allowed for a nearly 400 - mile range on a single 15.3 - gallon
tank of gas.
One
of the highlights regarding mileage on this car was driving from Tuscaloosa, AL to Houston, TX on a single
tank (
tank size is 17.1 US gallons)
of gas (over 600 + miles)
averaging 35 + mpg with 4 people and a trunk full
of stuff!
However, by the end
of the week with an empty
gas tank and quite a lot more aggressive city driving mixed in, the
average had dropped to 40.3 mpg — lower than the EPA's
average, but still quite respectable.
My
average fuel economy per
tank of gas dropped from over 45 mpg in the summer to just about 40 mpg in the winter.
The 2005 Ford Escape Hybrid traveled 576 miles on a single
tank of gas,
averaging more than 38 miles per gallon.
The
gas mileage is very good
averaging close to 35 mpg, and I get close to 400 miles per
tank of gas.
With the two
tanks of gas used to complete the road trip, the 3
averaged 31.2 mpg, while later
tanks consisting
of mostly city mileage produce roughly 27 mpg with my heavy right foot.
I love the LCD panel that provides all
of the information one could want about their vehicle: current and
average MPG, range left in the
gas tank, temperature, etc..
design
of sedan overall is great.this sedan is great on fuel (current price
of gas $ 3.10) i fill up once a week with $ 37.00 getting on
average 445 miles per
tank @ around 12.2 gallons.i travel 80 miles round trip to work so i need 400 miles to make it through work week not counting small trips here and there so filling up once a week is very nice.ONLY 1 thing i wish was better and that is design
of sun visors (too short) and since i travel east in the morning - the sun hits my eyes pretty hard so sunglasses a must.BUT thats it!
In the city I'm
averaging 43 mpg and highway driving gets 45 mpg due to its aerodynamic design, which means that I can get approximately 400 miles on one
tank of gas.
Consumers who fill their 12 gallon
tank on a weekly basis will pay an
average of $ 2,283.84 for their
gas in 2012!
FUSION HYBRID
AVERAGES 81.5 MPG, SETS WORLD RECORD WITH 1,445 MILES ON SINGLE
TANK OF GAS.
Think
of it: for just over $ 17 per month (less than half the cost
of a
tank of gas), you can get about $ 20,000 worth
of renters coverage, the same coverage you would get for HO - 3 homeowner's insurance, which costs on
average $ 703 per year.