Lawn mower gas mileage is generally categorized by gallons-used-per-hour, and the larger the motor's horsepower, the more fuel is used. A riding mower, for instance, with a 12 h.p. motor, and a one-gallon-tank, in middle-gear, will get around two hours per gallon.
You're unlikely to find any MPG value for lawn mowers, as they aren't intended for travelling. You might find a GPH, gallons per hour, though. Or possibly a gallons per acre or something like that.
bugatti veyron supersport, 9.0 mpg as per road and track testing
A 2011 model gets 19 MPG.
a 3/4 ton Chevy pickup with a 350 gets 15mpgs, at best, 8-10 worst
1990 Chevrolet suburban gets about 15 mpg.
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
No. Toyotas and Hondas do not qualify. A car has to get below 18 mpg and not even the worst Toyota gets that low of gas mileage
The Honda Insight gets a whopping estimated 66 highway mpg and 60 city mpg, and the Toyota Prius gets 60 city mpg as well but only 51 highway mpg, and also the Honda Civic Hybrid gets 47 city mpg and 48 highway mpg.
It gets in between 20-25 mpg
It looks like the 2011 Toyota RAV4 2WD gets the best MPG. It gets 28 MPG on the freeway and 22 MPG in the city. There is no reason it wouldn't be available in Honolulu.
The 2008 turbo diesel gets about 17 MPG on the highway and about 16.8 in mixed driving.
The average Chevy mpg for a SUV is about 13 mpg with the Suburban and Tahoe. The Traverse gets about 22 mpg. The Equinox gets about 24 mpg. Most rarely will you ever get close to 30 mpg. Though hybrids are coming out for the larger SUVs, yet they are hard to find.