There is no such thing as a Stock race car. The fact that it is a race car means it is not stock. MPG depends on exactly what type of race car you are asking about. Suffice to say, none get good mileage.
This varies by race car by race car. The mpg spends on the kind of track, weather conditions, tyres, and how long the race is. Some race cars are designed for high mpg. Example is that a F1 car would do around 3-4 mpg whereas some can do as much as 60 but for oblivious reasons. The average mpg usually around 3-6 MPG.
This depends entirely on how many miles per gallon (MPG) your car gets. A car that does 82 MPG, will use only 1 gallon. A car that does 41 MPG, will use 2 a gallons. A car that does 20 MPG will use 4 gallons. Divide the number of miles, by the known MPG of the vehicle.
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I have a 2003 Saab 9-3 2.0t Linear. and i was wondering if i put the K&N 57I intake in my car, will it increase MPG on my car? some people say cold air intakes decrease turbo lag but wouldn't that cause less MPG?
Fuel mileage varies from one track to another and averages around 2-5 mpg at race speed.
Toyota and Mazda are manufacturing companies that each make many models. Toyota makes the highest MPG car in the US this year with the Prius at 53 MPG and the lowest is the NASCAR race cars which get 3.5-4.5 MPG depending on the track.The 4 cylinder Camry and the 4 cylinder Mazda 6 both average 24 mpg this year. And by the way, the Chevrolet Malibu and Ford Fusion get 25 MPG when similarly equipped.
How many MPG any car gets depends solely on how the car is driven. If one does constant jack rabbit starts the MPG will drop to about 15 ... if one drives very conservatively, the MPG could rise to over 30.
That depends entirely - on how many miles per gallon (mpg) you get from the vehicle ! For example - a car that gives 60 mpg would use less than a car that only gives 40 mpg !
MPG stand for Miles Per Gallon, it tells you the average of how many miles you can go with a gallon of gasoline
Usually highway driving is where a car gets the most mpg.
Nowadays, F1 ars are not aloud to stop to refuel, to at the start they are filled to the top. A typial distance of a F1 race is about 305 KM or 189.51 Miles (2dp). On average, a F1 car in a race consumes around 75L per 100KM in which if you do the math is 3.136 MPG (US) or 3.766 MPG (UK).
THE NORMAL IS 21 MPG