yes
it can
have you tried new plugs you should get double that mpg
Volkswagen New Beetle that is 4 cyl, 1.8 L, Manual 5-spd, has 22 mpg city and 28 mpg highway miles. That is a bit better than Rabbit's 19/28 mpg.
the new diesels have great emissions, and get double the mpg, the old diesels have poor emissions though.
The new Cadillac escalade gets 13 mpg in the city and 20 mpg on the highway.
just purchasedmine and am getting 18 hauling 5K pounds and 21 mpg highway unloaded, both in windy weather. guartanteed to get better once i get 3k-4k mi on it :)
I bought a 2006 Honda Pilot new and have consistently gotten about 18 mpg. Naturally a little more, but not much, on the highway and about 17.5 - 18 with mixed driving.
Not enough info to answer. Please ask a new question and include the mpg of the car and the price of gas.Not enough info to answer. Please ask a new question and include the mpg of the car and the price of gas.
19 city 28 hwy, On my V-6 3.4 litre, this was correct till I installed all new Bosch Platinum 4 sparkplugs, on a 5 hour drive to Denver using 87 octane gas and a cruise speed of 75 mph, my grandam was getting 32 mpg average with the new plugs, in the city I was getting around 22 mpg, not a bad increase, I recommend Bosch Plat 4 plugs anyday.
Ok first off, most cars today use gasoline engines and not diesel engines so that has to be addressed as a factor (you cant run a diesel engine on spark plugs they use GLOW plugs) so assuming you are using a gasoline engine and not diesel then we can continue SO assuming you are using a gasoline engine that uses SPARK plugs in the first place I do not understand the question. BUT, Im assuming once again that you are wondering whether the different brands and or changing them out will yield better mpg The answer to that is yes on all counts. New spark plugs provide a better spark than older ones and as such increase the ratio of fuel actually burned inside the engine and not wasted. So it increases the mpg there The difference between brands are many and the materials each brand uses also varies. But your car comes with normally piss poor plugs to start with so picking a relatively cheap and well made product can give you the same results as your typical run of the mill OEM product. I would take the extra money and buy a more higher end model but not the most expensive ones. The reason is that the higher end spark plugs last longer in between changes, increase horsepower, increase mpg, and are made from better quality. They are better all the way around. I hope that answered your question
It varies by vehicle� The Chevy Silverago only gets 17mpg while the much lighter Toyota Prius and Honda Civic get 48 mpg The Honda Insight got 65 mpg on their manual model and 55 mpg on their auto� unfortunately, they do not make these cars anymore after 2006. They are coming out with a new model in 2009 however Hybrid's get 55 mpg (roughly) to conventional 30 mpg. It would be safe to assume that you get at least 10 more mpg with a hybrid then conventional car or truck.