Still only 22.5 MPG!
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>accelerator.
>
>What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I friend of mine bought a '03 Civic early this year and he didn't
start realizing the fuel efficiency numbers until shortly before his
third oil change. Before that, it wasn't even close to what he was
supposed to get. Around here, the recommended oil change is at
6,000KM (approx 3,500miles).
Wait until about the 10K mile mark and see what happens. In the
meantime, next time you go in for a service, mention it to the service
advisor so at least it's on record.
>I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>accelerator.
>
>What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I friend of mine bought a '03 Civic early this year and he didn't
start realizing the fuel efficiency numbers until shortly before his
third oil change. Before that, it wasn't even close to what he was
supposed to get. Around here, the recommended oil change is at
6,000KM (approx 3,500miles).
Wait until about the 10K mile mark and see what happens. In the
meantime, next time you go in for a service, mention it to the service
advisor so at least it's on record.
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>accelerator.
>
>What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I friend of mine bought a '03 Civic early this year and he didn't
start realizing the fuel efficiency numbers until shortly before his
third oil change. Before that, it wasn't even close to what he was
supposed to get. Around here, the recommended oil change is at
6,000KM (approx 3,500miles).
Wait until about the 10K mile mark and see what happens. In the
meantime, next time you go in for a service, mention it to the service
advisor so at least it's on record.
>I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>accelerator.
>
>What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I friend of mine bought a '03 Civic early this year and he didn't
start realizing the fuel efficiency numbers until shortly before his
third oil change. Before that, it wasn't even close to what he was
supposed to get. Around here, the recommended oil change is at
6,000KM (approx 3,500miles).
Wait until about the 10K mile mark and see what happens. In the
meantime, next time you go in for a service, mention it to the service
advisor so at least it's on record.
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On 11/22/03 10:48 PM, in article
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
#19
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On 11/22/03 10:48 PM, in article
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
#20
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On 11/22/03 10:48 PM, in article
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
#21
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On 11/22/03 10:48 PM, in article
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com, "gbsmith"
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
If you are accelerating through the gears with a feather-light touch, you
might be babying it too much. If you accelerate to cruising speed more
briskly, you should get better mileage because it ultimately spends more
time in the higher gear and less in the lower ones.
You don't want to be redlining it every time you start out from a stop, but
somewhere in between feather-light and drag strip should get you better
mileage.
Also, at 630 miles, you haven't filled it very many times (once, maybe
twice?). The free tank of gas that comes with the car is usually not
completely full. This will give an erroneous low MPG reading at the first
fill up.
#22
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
In article <S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com >, gbsmith
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
#23
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
In article <S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com >, gbsmith
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
#24
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
In article <S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com >, gbsmith
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
#25
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
In article <S_Wvb.4958$aw2.1419734@newssrv26.news.prodigy.com >, gbsmith
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
<gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
> I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> accelerator.
>
> What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
I believe that if you went on a long trip (over 100 miles) and most of
your driving was done on the freeway--your gas mileage would be a much
better. The problem with city driving is that your car is burning gas even
when you are at lots of red lights. This brings up the numbers when you
mesure your miles per gallon. I never even bother measuring my miles per
gallon unless I am going on a long trip. I usually gas up after I leave my
city and gas up again shortly before I enter the last city. You don't have
to wait for the tank to be near empty before you fill up the tank.
#26
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
#27
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
#28
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
#29
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>
> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
> >accelerator.
> >
> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>
> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
> friction of newly machined parts.
No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
specifies it is to be changed.
#30
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Still only 22.5 MPG!
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 15:14:37 -0500, "Scott MacLean"
<scottNO@SPAMnerosoft.com> wrote:
>"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
>news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com.. .
>> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>>
>> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>> >accelerator.
>> >
>> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>>
>> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
>> friction of newly machined parts.
>
>No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
>the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
>oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
>specifies it is to be changed.
Scott's right. You don't wanna be changing your oil too soon with a
new car. Should wait the full mileage before getting your first oil
change. Actually, I've been told for the first three oil changes,
shouldn't do it sooner than necessary.
<scottNO@SPAMnerosoft.com> wrote:
>"Phisherman" <nobody@noone.com> wrote in message
>news:is72sv8gjouneuv72dt20ud9c003tsr20p@4ax.com.. .
>> On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 04:48:50 GMT, gbsmith <gbsmith@kazaa.com> wrote:
>>
>> >I just tanked up my '04 Civic, and I'm still only getting ca. 22.5 MPG,
>> >city driving. The landscape here is very flat, I shift into neutral at
>> >red lights, and I swear I have been driving feather-light on the
>> >accelerator.
>> >
>> >What am I doing wrong? The car now has about 630 miles on it.
>>
>> Have you changed the oil & filter yet? There's a lot of inital
>> friction of newly machined parts.
>
>No, no no!! There is SUPPOSED to be friction between newly machined parts in
>the engine when it is being broken in. That's why they use special engine
>oil for the break-in period. Do not change the oil until the manual
>specifies it is to be changed.
Scott's right. You don't wanna be changing your oil too soon with a
new car. Should wait the full mileage before getting your first oil
change. Actually, I've been told for the first three oil changes,
shouldn't do it sooner than necessary.