160 gallons
9mpg city 15-17mpg highway
That depends greatly on the mileage your vehicle gets: if you drive a Hummer at about 9mpg you'll go about 162 miles; my 2006 Saturn VUE gets about 17mpg which translates to about 306 miles; if you drive one of the hybrids at about 32mpg you'll go about 576 miles.
1000 miles divided by 9 mpg = 111.111 gallons 111.111 gallons times 3.50 = 388.8885 (whatever currency you are using) If you're only getting 9mpg I would get a different car !
25 gallons. Multiply that by gas price per gallon where you live. Divide 225 by 9 which will give amount of fuel needed then multiply this total by cost of fuel where you live. 225/9 = 25 x cost of fuel per gallon.
Usually, it is the extravagent sports care that have the most gasoline per mile. These cars include the Lamborghinis (8-9mpg), Bently (9-11mpg) and the Ferrari (10mpg). In addition, many mercedes, BMW and Porche have horrible gas milage.
Depends on the yr/make/model/engine/trans./ 2wd or 4wd... Big blocks (460,454, V-10), 7-9mpg the average small block V8 trucks are like 13-17(20mpg newer cyl. deactivation models) 4cyl.-v6 compacts- 17-25mpg
Just the basics, such as a air filter, spark plugs, and spark plug wires should help it. You may also want to consider putting a bottle of fuel injection cleaner in the gas tank on your next fill up.
Can't say that I picture a LeBaron wagon as a police car, but hey- small towns have limited budgets. The 'typical' cruiser is a Ford Crown Victoria, because it's built to stand up to stressful service. The usual 'Cop package' consists of: -Heavy duty brakes and suspension -A 'muscle' engine, such as the Ford 250 ci, with overdrive (Gets about 9mpg in-town) -A driver-side hand operated spot light -A 'kill' switch for the fuel pump, located in the trunk -An emergency escape trunk latch release -Supplemental wiring(blue light bar, siren, etc) There's also a 'pursuit' package, consisting of a super-stock engine, wrap-around tubular steel front bumper and front end reinforcement- just the thing for punching those fleeing felons off the road. The most important component of any 'specialty' package is the driver. Most law enforcement types are exposed to pursuit/evasive driving courses, which teach you how to not only properly use the special toys, but get the most out of any vehicle you drive.
Need engine size, modifications (if any), and year. My '95 5.8L gets approximately 20mpg after adding aftermarket exhaust and a high-flow air filter. Stock 5.0-5.8L engines, at least in the 1992-96 model years, get around 13-14 city, 17-18 highway. Non-overdrive transmissions can greatly reduce these numbers. As far as the older carbureted engines, the 300I6 generally got 15 - 20mpg, depending on transmission and gearing, whereas the 302 was usually 15, and the 351 was 10 - 12. But those figures were before they began putting a percentage of ethanol in the fuel and on those older carburated engines and on the newer engines that aren't designed for any ethanol the fuel economy is subtracted anywhere from 2-9mpg.