Fuel Consumption
I put my first lot of fuel in the MH today( they gave me full tank too start with) after 560 miles since we picked it up. 31.75mpg on the first tankful although, of course, the engine hasn't reached 5000 miles yet so hopefully it will improve a bit when it has properly bedded in. Browsing around the web that seems fairly average. What do you other MHomers get. The reason I ask is that my mate in Spain claims he gets 40mpg out of his low profile 6.8m Elnagh. He's never struck me as a 'driving Miss Daisy type' to get that sort of figure.
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Your figure is on the money I would say. We get, with steady driving, and a max of 65 mph, between 28 and 32 mpg, depending on wind and terrain, but that's just what the van tells me. Can't be bothered to work it out any more accurately, it uses what it uses as far as I am concerned.
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My experience of the Fiat Ducato 130 engines, based on 3 vehicles from new, is that fuel consumption is predominantly a function of driving style and speed.
With the two PVCs we've had the average consumption was 31mpg when cruising speeds were around 70-75mph.
With our 7.4M Burstner (laden to just under 3.5t) and cruising speeds of around 60-65mph we achieve 30mpg on a regular basis. Wind directions and speeds also affect consumption dramatically on our Burstner. Your friend in Spain must drive down wind in a storm for most of the time or does he live on the top of a big hill?
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CY, I always keep a log of my fuel purchases / mileage over the ownership of my campers.
After almost 4 years of owning the present one ( Autocruise Jazz van conversion ) based on a 130 FIAT altho they were supposed to be on the very similar Pug and covering 6K approx pa , my figures are as follows
Winter -- approx 31 mpg
Not Winter --- approx 35 mpg
Living & driving in a town ( I do not have a car), does not do the consumption much good but I'd expect no better than another 2 mpg perhaps.
The long Scottish holidays I can get close to 40 mpg but noway could I be called a boy racer sticking in lane one with the lorries is much less stressful.
B
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We have a 7 metre low profile Pilote with a 150 Ducato engine, over 20,000 miles on the clock, and we averaged a fraction under 29 mpg on a 2,200 mile trip to France this year.
We do about 230 miles each way on Motorways to Eurotunnel and back to home in the UK.
For the rest of the mileage we used the French motorways to get anywhere quickly but mainly the normal roads at 'holiday' speeds.
Where possible we don't hang about on the Motorways in the UK - you should see my beloved with her foot down on the M25 (yes, it is possible - and thankfully the Police haven't spotted her so far).
We always adhere to the French speed limits, there are considerably more Police patrols in France, but once abroad we tend to relax more and meander from Aire to Aire – which helps considerably with consumption.
We are probably fully loaded at around 3500 kg most of the time and this is the first time I've bothered doing a check on the amount of fuel used.
I think your mate must do a lot of downhill driving with the wind behind him to consistently get over 40 mpg.
Hope this helps.
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Can’t do better than about 27 mpg on my AS Broadway, Peugeot 2.2, and its only 6.3m long coachbuilt. This is mostly Autoroute cruising or UK motorway around 65/67mph. Seems reasonable to me and I can’t figure out why everybody else gets more.
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We have done 1730 miles up until the last refuel and my average for the year is 25.53 mpg so far. That is a 130hp Peugeot Boxer. Mine is 7.5 metres long and wider than average. Must admit I don't pay much attention to driving economically, I just drive! Interestingly when driving in Europe we seem to get slightly better economy but nowhere near as impressive as some of the figures mentioned here. I take some comfort from the fact that my motorhome is more economical than than my two previous 4X4 towcars!!!
David
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Peugeot Boxer based Autoquest 5.75m long with luton.
On a tour of Yorkshire with four adults and a dog, fully booted and suited including water and tyres at a comfortable riding pressure, up hill and down dale, returned a healthy 29.6mpg on a round trip of 650 miles...
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I think so as well, weight also has a lot to do with it as well. My last motorhome a 3.8 ton 7.5 meter Hi-line Autotrail Mohican on a Mercedes Sprinter chassis used to average about 24 m.p.g. I'm lucky if I get 20 m.p.g. out of my 6.5 ton 8 meter RS on an Iveco chassis with a 3 litre Fiat engine. Typical average is 19.6m.p.g. but on mountainous roads it can easily drop below this. Even these figures are better than I used to get out of one of my tow cars.
peedee
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ive had trips in my earlier Boleros where i 'got 32+' mpg...but other, less ecoonomical journeys would always bring the long term average back down....to around 28 ish...
the latest two 150bhp vans have been around 26-28, again depending on speed on autoroute etc...
slow, quiet trips (not too many roundabouts) might see this van back towards 29+ but that would be rare...27 is a fair reflection of the 6500 miles this year...
anyone getting over 30 long term average is doing pretty well...
32 is really good (small light van, slower speeds?)
36 is pretty darn good and i wouldnt want to be behind you.....
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Are these figures being worked out on Fuel put in and Miles traveled or what the dashboard is telling you.?
If you base it on the vehicles on board computer then I wouldn't believe to be factual.
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I've had five motorhomes in 18 years and each gave me just over 27mpg.
My current one [Aclass dynamics of a brick] has averaged 29mph over 27,000 miles in 4 years. Whether it is the Comfortmatic or the 130 engine or my more relaxed style of driving now I'm retired I don't know. It may be simply because more of our trips avoid the Pennines and the motorways. On a run south through Cheshire and Shropshire I will get into the 30s and over 30mpg was regular when we toured the Continent. Our dash reading is, like peedee finds, about 1mpg out - the Fiat figure is consistently lower - measured over a thousand miles or so at a time.
I wonder whether CY's figures will get marginally worse as he gets used to the van. I'd be pleased with his current figure.
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I measured actual fuel used against mileage for the first couple of thousand miles and found the computer to be comparable. As the computer is taking an average over a long period I would expect it to be accurate. Don't bother now; nothing is going to change the consumption by much unless I slow down significantly and as we all know (because the government has told us) going too slow on the motorway is DANGEROUS!
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My figures ( as above ) are calculated from TOTAL FUEL & TOTAL MILES COVERED over the time I have owned the 'van
All these are logged in my "Little Blue Notebook" when filling up.
The one point made by some is the speed / acceleration -- I don't reach the speed limit on M-ways, I treat the trips out as a part of the leisure experience and so keep to the lorry limits normally.
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I'm getting 28.2 mpg from my 2.0 litre 2017 Bailey Autograph II, while towing a Toyota Aygo on an A Frame, (sorry for using the 'A' word). I'm pleased with that, I drive normally not frugally, but stick to speed limits. Hoping to get more mpg once the engine is bedded in, that's if diesels aren't banned by then.
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Looks like in pretty much 'on the money' for fuel consumption then. Miker be able to miser an extra 1-2 mpg as the engine matures, unless as has been suggested I develop a penchant for flooring it a bit more.
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Lincoln to Colchester via A46, A1, A14, A12, about 160 miles, 27.9 mpg towing a Fiat 500 on an A-frame. Best part of 4500kg all up weight, Euro 5 plus 130 bhp Ducato 7.1 metres low profile with cruise control set to 2000rpm.
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Yes, just depends on what instrument you are looking at when you press the set button.
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Just like so many above, our average economy is in the very early 30's.
Pretty consistently, too. I would doubt whether the laws of physics would permit much improvement on that figure, either.0 -
Ours is a Fiat 150bhp auto with swift 714 7.77m low profile, GVW 4.24t March 2017. 3200 miles. 29mpg. After running in completely I envisage 31mpg ish.
This could improove if the champagne & gin bottles were removed.
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As I suspected, the big differences in fuel consumptions are due to driving style and speed. 55 mph cruising against 65 to 67 would apparently account for around 5 mpg.
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