stackmonkey wrote:
I tend to keep to constant speed rather than constant throttle on the motorway....
I would go with that. At speed, drag will be the biggest loss (ignoring engine/transmission losses). The drag energy used to traverse a given distance is proportional to the square of the speed. Think of it like RMS current: smooth delivery of a given charge will minimise overall resistance losses.
SafeSpeed wrote:
I don't see that this can work to maximise fuel economy. After all you have to use extra fuel going uphill to maintain speed,.
Engines are most efficient when delivering a decent amount of power, strictly speaking – more torque at reasonable revs (due to internal friction losses). Operating at that power band will use disproportionately less fuel when hill-climbing.
Knocking the car out of gear when going downhill will minimise the revs from the engine which will directly lead to less frictional loss (hence less fuel used); less benefit will be gained if the engine is kept in gear when going downhill.
SafeSpeed wrote:
and you can't use gravity acceleration going downhill. One seems to lose both ways
This bit throws me, can you explain?
SafeSpeed wrote:
Surely allowing speed to bleed off when going uphill (converting kinetic to potential energy) and allowing speed to pick up when going downhill (converting potential energy to kinetic energy) is optimal.
Allowing speed to vary so much will lead to disproportionately more drag losses at the higher speeds, resulting with a greater net drag loss (RMS loss). Also, piddling up a hillside with no torque from the engine will yield poor power efficiency.
It’s better to power (torque) your way up at your desired average speed.