To find the better gas mileage, divide the miles driven by the number of gallons used and compare: (1) Tom: 290 ÷ 23.2 = 12.5 miles per gallon; (2) Sui: 225 ÷ 15 = 15 miles per fallon. Sui had the better mileage.
The gas mileage on Hyundai Elantra cars depends on where one drives. If one drives in the city, one can expect 28 miles, highway at 38, and combined at 32 miles.
Many times a high mileage newer used car is much better to buy. The miles are most likely highways miles which are way easier on a car than city driven miles, which is mostly stop and go traffic, and the book price is reduced according to mileage making them an even better deal.
A brand new car should have very little mileage. It can have a few hundred miles based on journeys to and from factories or showrooms and also from test drives with customers.
(x + y + z) / 3
The mileage of a car per year depends on how much you drive it. If you're a commuter that drives 45 minutes to get to work every day, you're going to rack up more miles than a guy who drives his kids 30 seconds to school.
#1). 162/6 = 27 mpg#2). 203/7 = 29 mpgThe second example is better gas mileage.
There is no required mileage, but the less the better as for all cars
(x+y+z)/3The mean average is (x+y+z)/3 miles.
no
I had a 1999 Chevrolet Lumina with a 3.1 liter engine and the average I drove was 29 miles per gallon. I have never encountered a way to improve getting better mileage. It just really depends how a person drives.
High mileage could be your own interpretation. However I drive a 2001 Ram 5.9 with 180k miles and it runs fine, factory motor and trans. My step-dad drives an 04 Ram with 120k miles and needs a head gasket. Take care of your motor and it will treat you well.
x+y+z/3 (x plus y plus z divided by 3)