You can look this up at www.kbb.com. Quick answer...my 2003 L200 is getting approx. 24 city / 28 highway. Has 73k miles on it, too. My mileage has moved up to 95,000. If I keep my speed down to 65mph, my mpg moves up to 31. Cool!
Depends on if it is a V6, 4 cylinder, manual transmission, automatic transmission, regular car, or double cab, none of which you list. The highway mileage range is from 17 to 23 mpg.
The final year for production of the Chevrolet Cavalier was 2005. The EPA estimated highway and city for the 2005 Cavalier with the 2.2L 4-cylinder and automatic transmission is 31/21 miles per gallon.
The 1990 Honda Accord with an automatic transmission gets an estimated 19 mpg in the city. The vehicle gets an estimated 22 mpg highway mileage.
A Mazda 626 with 4 cylinder engine and automatic transmission gets about 20-25 MPG. Your mileage will vary according to driving conditions. Worst case city driving will result in mileages as low as 19 MPG. 28 MPG is typical on a good highway. A straight shift transmission can increase your gas mileage slightly. With manual transmission you can get up to 33 MPG on the highway. The V6 gets slightly less mileage. You will get about 18-24 MPG with the V6 and automatic transmission
The 1993 Honda Accord EX with the 2.0L 4-cylinder was offered in automatic and manual transmission options. The 5-speed manual has an EPA estimated 29 highway miles per gallon and 21 city. The 4-speed automatic is 26 highway and 19 city.
I had a 1993 several years ago and I think I got about 26 MPG combined city and highway driving.
The gas mileage of a 1981 Corvette can depend on whether it is automatic or manual transmission. With automatic transmission, it gets 15 mpg on the highway, and 21 in the city, but with manual transmission, it gets 14 mpg on the highway, and 22 in the city.
MT stands for Manual Transmission and AT stands for Automatic Transmission.
with an automatic four your gas mileage can range between 14mpg and 16mpg. It will vary according to your type of driving. stop and go..obviously less mpg..highway..better mileage. remember a Jeep is for rock climbing and low torque power which is not conduceive to good mileage.
Regular cab, 4 cylinder, with manual transmission.
Actually, not terribly poor mileage. It really depends on if it is a automatic or a manual transmission, as well if it is equipped with a 350 or the more economical 305 or even 6 cylinder engine. If you have the 305 version with the MT, 17-18 mpg is the usual.
But it will start when in park? If that's the case you probably have a bad transmission clutch solenoid. You can by-pass the problem by unplugging the plug that goes into the front of your transmission, but your gas mileage will go way down.