How to drive economically - Save money on fuel!

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  • čas přidán 19. 04. 2020
  • The way you drive can easily account for 20% of your fuel costs, this video should help you drive the same distance for less money.
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    This video is a guide intended to help people who are learning to drive with a driving instructor in the UK, it is by no means a replacement for driving lessons with an appropriately qualified driving instructor.
    Laws and driving rules may be different in your country. The makers of this video cannot be held liable for any consequences caused by any information that is in any way inaccurate, misleading or missing. The makers of this video are not liable for any person's driving other than their own, it is the responsibility of the person driving a vehicle to ensure they drive safely and within the law. The makers of this video are also not liable for any person failing a driving test as a result of the information provided in the video.

Komentáře • 579

  • @user-mb7gh4nu1j
    @user-mb7gh4nu1j Před 4 lety +646

    I get infinity mpg by just pushing the car.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +74

      😂

    • @nikyabodigital
      @nikyabodigital Před 3 lety +85

      that's not economical tho coz you'll need alot of food and water to push the car and reach your destination

    • @vongsakra253919
      @vongsakra253919 Před 3 lety +7

      @@nikyabodigital True

    • @abdullahhussain9589
      @abdullahhussain9589 Před 2 lety +10

      @@nikyabodigital not unless you push it down a hill

    • @K24B
      @K24B Před 2 lety +7

      @@abdullahhussain9589 yea then who's gonna stop the car 😂

  • @vetlehedlund1262
    @vetlehedlund1262 Před rokem +66

    Good fuel economy pro tip: Have a pandemic going on, ensuring no traffic ruining your planning. PS: Love your teaching. Thank you for helping me pass my test!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před rokem +5

      Thank you for watching and congratulations on passing!

  • @topherzerudo1239
    @topherzerudo1239 Před rokem +89

    got my car from 9-11 km/l to 13-16km/l on city driving conditions. as a student driving to school with limited gas money, this really helped me a lot. thank you so much

    • @victoriagrayson5082
      @victoriagrayson5082 Před 8 měsíci +3

      *Got my car from 9--11 km/L to 13--16km/L at city driving conditions. As a student driving to school with limited gas money, this really helped me a lot. Thank you so much.

    • @HowDoYouUseSpaceBar
      @HowDoYouUseSpaceBar Před 8 měsíci

      @@victoriagrayson5082 ...

    • @xxxx-ku2ch
      @xxxx-ku2ch Před 8 měsíci

      dawg @@victoriagrayson5082

    • @alfredo5189
      @alfredo5189 Před 8 měsíci +23

      @@victoriagrayson5082 bohoo, go in your backyard and breathe air

    • @quirinhorak8850
      @quirinhorak8850 Před 17 dny

      @@victoriagrayson5082 🤓

  • @VSTV1993
    @VSTV1993 Před 4 lety +161

    My car is getting 2 weeks to the gallon whilst in lockdown 😉

  • @franciscoignaciopetrone5679

    Your videos are really great dude! keep up the great work! got my license last year and still watching lots of videos to learn more and more! :D it's driving me insane (no pun intended) to not be able to ride in my car these quarantine days!
    Hope all this huge problem goes away sooner than later so we can all get to the road back again!

  • @grethen123
    @grethen123 Před 4 lety +41

    Loved that you managed to make an actual driving video despite the lockdown

  • @rafaelcarmo5562
    @rafaelcarmo5562 Před 4 lety +148

    I find it hard to drive "slowly" because of the peasents behind, I feel like they are always close to the back of my car

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +101

      Try your best to ignore people following closely behind, if you let them put you under pressure that pressure will make you less safe. Most sensible drivers feel the pressure, what matters is how good you are at ignoring it.

    • @Aaron-rr1gs
      @Aaron-rr1gs Před 4 lety +24

      If you're not doing the speed limit when it's safe to do so you're being inconsiderate of other drivers.

    • @momentous58
      @momentous58 Před 4 lety +1

      if its a 1 lane way then well.. accelerate or ignore them if its dangerous

    • @dc5v529
      @dc5v529 Před 3 lety +6

      Where I live everyone is always going 60mph in an area where the speed limit is 45. This made it intimidating to drive as I am not quick at shifting and I just started driving a manual car.

    • @lakshyamongia3270
      @lakshyamongia3270 Před 2 lety +15

      thought the same when i was new. But then i realised i could be doing 100 in a 60 zone and there would still be an asshat doing 120 and put me under pressure. You just ignore them and drive at whatever you find comfortable.

  • @sisaymesele
    @sisaymesele Před 3 lety +2

    Do you know how much I am addicted to watch your videos, it is because they are all awesome, and thank you for uploading.
    From Ethiopia, Africa

  • @B-anonymous
    @B-anonymous Před 4 lety +68

    So me literally putting the pedal too the floor everywhere explains why my fuel light is constantly on 😂

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      😂

    • @riowalsh4263
      @riowalsh4263 Před 4 lety

      Try do it with a Mitsubishi Evo x you struggle to go 30 miles without using atleast half the tank

    • @Mr330d
      @Mr330d Před 3 lety

      @@riowalsh4263 Nonsense

  • @pj-vb5rk
    @pj-vb5rk Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for continuing to pump out these videos during these times

  • @heros2110
    @heros2110 Před 4 lety +26

    The problem is, putting load on low engine rpm all the time will cause the intake manifold and its components to clog up after a certain time. Some cars need for example a certain amount of higher revs because of the valvetrain. Mercedes for example, on its older 1.6 liter supercharger in the W204, has the valves turned in its seat due to resonance at 4,000 rpm. Which is why it is not always recommended to go at low revs like that. You will end up with maintenance costs for measures that try to save money by saving fuel at any price.
    However, this video is helpful and let my comment be understood as further input to the discussion.
    And of course, there is nothing wrong with low engine speed. Just don't do it all the time.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +5

      Thank you, it's all down to the setup of the engine. Work with what you have.

    • @emvlogzz5307
      @emvlogzz5307 Před rokem +4

      I’m very biased against what you’ve stated here. With my cars 2 of them especially, I VERY Rarely go over 2.5k revs when driving. And after years of driving one of them it’s been absolutely perfect. Having your engine at around 1.5k revs “unless accelerating hard” is an extremely easy existence for a car. It’s always good to put your foot down and rev the car to 3.5-4.5k to give the car a “clean out” although I only see that necessary in a diesel car, purely to clean out the dpf as they like to clog up. From my experience keeping revs low is the best for an engine.

    • @marvin2678
      @marvin2678 Před 8 měsíci

      @@emvlogzz5307 yeah i would agree with that budddy

  • @JTPLetsPlay
    @JTPLetsPlay Před 3 lety +44

    Useful info thank you. I'm a delivery driver so keeping fuel cost down is really hard with all the stopping and starting, my van being very heavy with parcels and the distance I have to travel. I'm spending almost £200 a week on diesel at the moment so anything I can do to help keep cost down really helps. I'll give these techniques a go.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 3 lety +12

      You're welcome, engine off as much as possible will also keep fuel costs down.

    • @redux1647
      @redux1647 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ConquerDriving i cant drive that low 2500 is the min for the engine to still be able to pull usually when slowing down i can keep it at 2500 rpm when i change down it goes upto 2500 rpm seem to get 48 and just for gigles removed the rear seats and spare wheel get about 54

    • @micheals1992
      @micheals1992 Před 2 lety +2

      @@redux1647 have you ever tried driving based on the load? When you get to your target speed shift up and when you need more power shift down and then shift up again when you no longer need the "pull". My car won't accelerate when I'm doing 30mph in 5th gear (1,200 rpm with a 1L 3 cylinder petrol engine) so I rev match downshift to 3rd and then go straight back into 5th when I no longer need the power. Believe it or not but the engine is quite smooth in 5th at 30mph on flat ground... It holds 100-120mpg during this kind of 30mph cruising.

    • @emvlogzz5307
      @emvlogzz5307 Před rokem +1

      @@redux1647 being at 2.5k+ revs permanently just puts unnecessary stress and wear on the engine. Only when you need to accelerate hardish is it needed to rev much higher than that, but then again every car is different

  • @onev99yt55
    @onev99yt55 Před 4 lety +18

    Just bought this exact spec Leon yesterday, watching your videos to understand more about the car, been focusing on the video about smooth gear changes as I need to sharpen up to be honest. Thanks for your informative videos.

  • @AlteranAnciote
    @AlteranAnciote Před 4 lety +9

    I learnt (and passed) in a Vauxhall Corsa in December, and I've been driving a Seat Leon (FR Black) since late January. The Leon is great - absolutely love it for a "first car". It can be quite an economic car to drive if you're a smooth driver.

  • @xuananator
    @xuananator Před 2 lety +27

    This is awesome, I’ve been debating getting a manual or not for my first car, and I think this finally sold me on it haha. Fuel is getting rather expensive and having control over the where the rpm’s are sitting might be important for my pocketbook going forward…

    • @billybritt5334
      @billybritt5334 Před 2 lety +7

      # 1 thing to save fuel is not go speed limit if it's 70 I go 59 and I get 8mpg better then the sticker which say highway 24 mpg that's a big savings

    • @dumitrascuclaudiu7097
      @dumitrascuclaudiu7097 Před rokem +1

      I get mine from first day converted to LPG!.

    • @marvin2678
      @marvin2678 Před 8 měsíci +2

      what did you get ?

  • @t-love8751
    @t-love8751 Před 9 měsíci

    Just started watching this channel…love the content and the cherry on top is the regional and language differences; says me from the USA.

  • @shadowwsk3507
    @shadowwsk3507 Před rokem +7

    Drive at a lower speed is also very important. Remember, drag increases to the square of velocity,

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před rokem

      That's very true, generally during my eco driving I do try to keep up with normal traffic flow though.

  • @MichaelFlatman
    @MichaelFlatman Před 4 lety +16

    Might just be me but I found this very entertaining to watch.. my car has a trip computer and when I am a bit bored and need to go on a boring journey I reset the trip computer and try to break my mpg record..
    It's like racing, but much safer and the blackbox agrees :P
    Well done for making this into a driving video, despite it being a bit early!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +4

      Thanks Michael, I find it can be a bit of fun trying to get high mpg but I like revs a lot more.

    • @TitanK1lls
      @TitanK1lls Před 4 lety +1

      Best I can get with my car is 35 mpg, doesn't want to go higher than that. Worst I had was 8.5 mpg, and usually my daily city driving mpg is around 10-14 mpg.. I was not wise to choose my car lol

  • @BLK2000
    @BLK2000 Před 2 lety

    Loved the 'nailed it' confident smile when u realised ud done it! (and the pigeons say thank you :) )

  • @skyline_supra_guy3756
    @skyline_supra_guy3756 Před 4 lety +19

    Don't forget to mention taking the racing line which also helps save fuel!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +4

      This is true. But obviously inappropriate on the road.

    • @skyline_supra_guy3756
      @skyline_supra_guy3756 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ConquerDriving I know; it was a joke.

    • @angrysocialjusticewarrior
      @angrysocialjusticewarrior Před 2 lety +2

      @@skyline_supra_guy3756 I take racing lines with my lane.
      When taking curves, I usually drive in a way that requires as little turning of the wheels as possible (which is the same as a racing line) without going outside of my lane.
      It was important that I do this as it maintained great customer satisfaction when driving clients (no, not Uber or e-hailing). I did this mainly to be a smooth driver, but also noticed it saved fuel because I did not need to slow down as much thanks to the racing line.

  • @anishussain7093
    @anishussain7093 Před 2 lety

    Your videos are always helpful thanks

  • @lucabarbieri4599
    @lucabarbieri4599 Před 4 lety +103

    Putting your foot underneath the brake pedal is the dumbest thing I’ve heard a driving instructor say, if your shoes get caught underneath then that’s an accident waiting to happen.

    • @owenanderson9395
      @owenanderson9395 Před 4 lety +3

      When in Cruise, I rest my foot in its natural position on the accelerator, where there is enough pedal resistance to support the weight. From there I can press a little to clear blind spots, and readily pivot to cover or use the brake pedal if needed.

    • @shaundasilveira3356
      @shaundasilveira3356 Před 4 lety +21

      If you manage to get your foot stuck under the brake then you're the dumbest thing ever

    • @lucabarbieri4599
      @lucabarbieri4599 Před 4 lety

      Shaun Da Silveira I agree but anything can happen and this is not a thing a driving instructor should teach his students

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +38

      I don't teach my students to put their foot under the brake, I don't get them to use cruise control. This is where my foot goes when I relax. I am yet to get my foot stuck using cruise control after around 400,000 miles of driving and can't see what it could get stuck to. There is no where else to put my foot unless I keep my knee severely bent which is not comfortable.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +11

      @@owenanderson9395 If i rest on the gas it will accelerate as there is little resistance.

  • @daniellee6912
    @daniellee6912 Před 2 lety

    Didn't know about these tips. Thank you

  • @YAB-lq1ff
    @YAB-lq1ff Před 3 lety

    Wonderful video mate ! Just an absolute shame it has so few views... Thx for the valuable info as well as the little "analysis" at the end found it very interesting (though i dont drive :/ )

  • @StuartChau500
    @StuartChau500 Před 4 lety +2

    I don’t have the luxury of cruise control but max gear, min revs is what I do too. I have 4 gears and I use 4th as low as 20mph (basically idle, not lugging). Most times I like to do one pedal driving because I drive calm and relaxed. I’ve been averaging about 35mpg in the city and about 50mpg on motorways. Decent for a 28 year old brick😂. On another note I have also driven an automatic car with cruise control (first car I drove after passing) and when I’m using cruise control it’s my fingers that do all the work. Instead of braking for everything I first dial the speed down accordingly, then gently brake if I must.

  • @user-zw8fb6fp5c
    @user-zw8fb6fp5c Před měsícem

    2:19: Can we take a moment to appreciate this kind gent for waking up on early Sunday morning to educate us?

  • @clover7359
    @clover7359 Před 4 lety +28

    The most fuel efficient speed to travel at is between 35 and 45 mph (55-75 km/h), in the highest gear available. I came to this conclusion by using a scangauge tool to monitor instant fuel consumption over long stretches of road and experimenting with different speeds and different cars.
    Going any faster creates excess wind resistance, which hurts fuel efficiency, and going any slower won't take advantage of the torque of the engine and the gearing.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +4

      Probably about right, in my Leon it's definitely around 30mph for best economy.

    • @forza223bowe5
      @forza223bowe5 Před 4 lety +1

      I was always told 55 mph is the best speed for eco driving

    • @MattySquared
      @MattySquared Před 2 lety

      In my vw tdi I get the best mpg around 55-60mph

    • @billybritt5334
      @billybritt5334 Před 2 lety +1

      @@forza223bowe5 @ 70 mph there is 70% more drag on vehicle then going 55... speed limit 70 I drive 59 and get almost 8.5 miles more then the sticker which says 24 highway so by me driving 59 it's like getting every 3rd fill-up absolutely free

    • @jonmarvicvinarao9149
      @jonmarvicvinarao9149 Před rokem

      For me,it depends on traffic speed and expressway recommended speed for your car.

  • @PaulL42654
    @PaulL42654 Před 4 lety +18

    I'll try and drive economically on long journeys, but having heavy feet means that driving round town is a different story :)))

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +3

      I also like to have heavy feet from time to time.

    • @forza223bowe5
      @forza223bowe5 Před 4 lety +1

      It’s fine to be a bit heavy footed to give the engine a good blast at times.

  • @jessehurdle7763
    @jessehurdle7763 Před 11 měsíci

    holding a mirror to my monitor so i can learn how to drive in america. thank you for these videos!

  • @josephwilliamson8840
    @josephwilliamson8840 Před 8 měsíci

    Nice video mate, I passed my test two weeks ago on Tuesday and I've been averaging 40.6MPG. Ford Focus EcoBoost 1.0 :)

  • @charlesholland-keen2222
    @charlesholland-keen2222 Před 4 lety +3

    Not only saving fuel but also tyres, brakes and possibly lubricants. That also helps the environment with less pollution. Very light traffic on that journey possibly due to early morning, daytime and lock-down. Well worth watching and many people could benefit from adopting that technique.

    • @johnhall4917
      @johnhall4917 Před 4 lety +1

      Less stress on the car and less stress on the driver. My 17 years of driving has taught me that 70% of road users treat the speed limit as a minimum so I just let them crack on.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      Very true.

  • @Digi20
    @Digi20 Před 2 lety +20

    Had that same exact spec leon as a rental. I often drive the same routes and always get different cars, so i can compare quite well how much they consume. The leon is to this date the second most fuel efficient car i have been driving (5.2l/100km combined -> 53mpg uk). It even undercuts diesels (like the 1.5 90hp in the renault captur) and the fiat 500 1.0 hybrid (!) while beeing the nicest and most punchy to drive as well. you can toddle around at very low revs in the highest gear possible and still have decent torque available, without lugging the engine.
    Most small diesels (below ~2.0l displacement) in comparision dont work in day to day driving because they fall in a terrible lag below 2000rpm so you drive them around in third instead of fifth or sixth gear, which is bad for the consumption. and the little fiat 500 just has no power so you are constantly foot to the floor and reving oit the engine to get it moving.
    nice car.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety +2

      Agreed, I do really enjoy this engine.

    • @johnnyalanbailey
      @johnnyalanbailey Před 9 měsíci

      My mini cooper diesel 1.6 will do about 60mpg in 5th at 31mph around town, only have to put my foot down and because of the torque curve it’ll get up to speed without needing to downshift 🤷‍♂️

  • @davidriley9194
    @davidriley9194 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve got up to 50mpg once in my car and in a petrol like I have, keep the revs below 3000rpm and accelerate gently and let it roll before start braking. And in a diesel keep the revs below 2000rpm. I also do not recommend to keep the revs below 1500rpm in a petrol as the components will start clogging up and that’s when major repairs involved. Just drive on what you do normally. Might be best to start flooring it down every now and again to help the valves and other components open. Thanks for the video!

  • @noisebeats
    @noisebeats Před rokem +1

    Nice video! for my car 1400rpm is the sweet point (volvo s40 2.0D 2004). I usually drive alone or with my young son, so I often manage to get better fuel consumption at 1200rpm, especially on small, almost flat descents. But when I take more people in the car I avoid riding below 1400rpm. On trips of about 50km at about 90km/h I can average above 4l/100 (or more than 60mpg) which is great for a 2.0. It forces me to pay more attention while driving, given that small climbs require more rpms and obviously at 1200rpm the car does not respond, in an emergency situation it may be necessary to change gears quickly. But keeping away from other cars, not going at low speed to minimize the number of times you are overtaken, avoiding overtaking other cars, being attentive and anticipe brakes with engine braking are always good tips for maintaining economical and safe driving

  • @WolvesInferno
    @WolvesInferno Před 28 dny

    I love your videos, Richard. I knew most of these tips already, however, there were some I didn't. I have a 2012 Toyota Auris Hybrid 1.8 litre. It's a fantastic car, and it has saved me so much on fuel compared to my previous car which was a VW Golf 1.6 Highline petrol. I got an average of 50 to 55 mpg with that car, which was very very good for a petrol car. The Auris Hybrid gets an average of 75 to 85 mpg on a good road. If there are any hills/inclines I get a reduced 60 to 64 mpg.

  • @samlai5411
    @samlai5411 Před 2 lety

    Enjoyed that full commentary tutorial.
    I drive a 3.5L Camry. I used to get 24MPG on my normal drives. But just last week i decided to drive 50mph instead of my usual 60mph on the motorway, ive noticed my MPG rise to 41.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety +2

      Speed makes a significant difference.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 Před 8 měsíci

      @@ConquerDriving
      on the German motorway I use 4.5 to 5l/100km gasoline cruising at 95kph
      I use around 17.5l/100km cruising at 200kph (that's around 35l per operating hour)

  • @medmsw2307
    @medmsw2307 Před 4 měsíci

    youtube needs to have a mirror screen button just for this guys videos.

  • @boban250
    @boban250 Před 4 lety +4

    19:20 to get even more out of the engine braking I'd already go into third. This repeats multiple times through the video, say for slowing for a speed limit change you know about, going down a gear will slow you faster and also lets you better react in case you need to speed up, because your engine isn't barely above idle.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +2

      Until the consumption meter registers fuel use fuel cut is still active so shouldn't make any different only more wear on the transmission for changing to a lower gear at higher speed. Unless you rev match but that uses more fuel.

  • @salemfonesfundi7228
    @salemfonesfundi7228 Před 2 lety

    thanks for your time

  • @pansatsujin
    @pansatsujin Před 7 měsíci +1

    Other drivers hate me so much when I'm eco-driving on the highway😂

  • @FireicerCooper
    @FireicerCooper Před 10 měsíci +9

    You should also note driving at high torque conditions with very low revs causes extra engine ware. Your oil pressure is at its lowest under 1500rpm so you are running the risk of taking out your bearings. It's hard to get a good balance of high oil pressure for good oil protection vs fuel economy. Some cars have an electric oil pump independent from the engine rpm however these are very rare on consumer cars.

  • @riddoxafrica9788
    @riddoxafrica9788 Před 4 lety

    Wow! I like it. Thank you

  • @Grahamvfr
    @Grahamvfr Před 4 lety +5

    Oops national speed limit is 50mph for lorries in England and Wales, changed 2015.
    Interesting video!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +3

      You're absolutely right, I'm stuck in the past.

  • @IvanToman
    @IvanToman Před rokem +2

    Hey friend! There is a reason why using cruise control might not be the most economical drive, and using your foot on the gas pedal might give better economy. Cruise control will probably be more eco on the flat road, but when it comes to uphills and downhils it is not anymore. Cruise control wants to keep constant speed, and that is not the economical way of going uphill. Increasing elevation is physically the same process as the acceleration, thus, when you drive uphill you basically accelerate even though you don't change speed. Now, if your ECU insist of keeping your speed constant, it will inject much more fuel than needed to get to the top of the hill, engine will be loaded a lot and you it will use lot of fuel for that uphill run. When vehicle get on the top, it will again try to keep the same speed downhill, even though now it can increase speed with very small fuel penalty.
    On the other hand if you drive by your foot and use constant accelerator pedal position, vehicle will somewhat slow down on the uphill part of the road but will use much less fuel than in the cruise control example. When it gets to downhill, it can accelerate back very easy with small amount of fuel and thus, when you combine both uphill and downhill part, you will spend much much less fuel compared to cruise control example, with very minor increase in the total time required to complete the total distance.

  • @Mustapha_El_Hamdaoui
    @Mustapha_El_Hamdaoui Před 10 měsíci +2

    Thanks!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 7 měsíci

      Wow! That's amazing, thank you for your generosity! Thank you for watching and I hope you continue to find the videos interesting. I apologise that my reply is late, I've only just noticed your comment.

  • @michellehawkins20
    @michellehawkins20 Před 2 lety

    This is so helpful thankyou including the engine breaking video you done will help me have a less of a heavy foot as my instructor said

  • @jonmarvicvinarao9149
    @jonmarvicvinarao9149 Před rokem +1

    For me,it depends on traffic speed and expressway recommended speed for your car.

  • @danielteyehuago1633
    @danielteyehuago1633 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for sharing it

  • @Mr330d
    @Mr330d Před 4 lety +2

    I do love doing these On my way to work I always achieve crazy numbers around 77-80mpg mainly because it’s all downhill and you can engine break sitting at 55mph

    • @johnhall4917
      @johnhall4917 Před 4 lety

      Impressive figures for a 330d

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      The 330d has a very good engine. Swirl baffles aside for the older models.

    • @Mr330d
      @Mr330d Před 4 lety

      Conquer Driving Someday I will buy another I could listen to that engine all day long I sold my E46 330d at 170K miles and it was running perfect remapped to 235bhp with swirl delete and egr delete these days I’m playing it safe and daily driving a Toyota Auris . But if I find a clean E46 330d again I’ll snap it up just scarce in Northern Ireland now as anyone who has one knows how good they are and wants to hold onto them

  • @dcddoucette7973
    @dcddoucette7973 Před 10 měsíci

    I live in a hilly area so I accelerate to max speed on the downhills when gravity is helping and gradually reduce 10 km/h uphill when gravity is fighting. Carry the downhill momentum.

  • @adrianarmstrong1320
    @adrianarmstrong1320 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video. Just a point of correction. National speed limit for lorries is 50mph not 40 on primary routes.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you, that's correct, I think the law changed in 2015. Old habits.

  • @micheals1992
    @micheals1992 Před 2 lety +1

    One car to mention about the aerodynamics at the end... The aptera although I can't imagine this car ever coming fully to market

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety

      I like the look of the Mercedes EQXX. It's a concept but I like the idea.

  • @wyattazcooks
    @wyattazcooks Před 7 měsíci

    Great techniques, thank you for the video. Really disappointing that stuff like this isn't taught here in America. People will floor it, tailgate and traffic snake, never coast into lights or stop signs, and idle their engines for 20 minutes in drive-throughs then wonder why they get such poor fuel economy.

  • @Krull0r
    @Krull0r Před 4 lety +1

    My personal record with my Audi A3 Limousine 2.0 TDI with 150 HP was 3.83 L/100km ( Board-Computer showed 3.4 L/100km). I used to drive very passive and max 105 km/h on the Autobahn.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      That's very economical!

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yeah, the TDI is quite fuel efficient. And Diesel has a bit more energy density than gasoline.
      For me it was around 4l/100km in a Toyota Aygo. Got 920km out of the 35l fuel tank before filling it up again.

  • @jayjones5584
    @jayjones5584 Před 4 lety +2

    Really helpful

  • @Johnykeys
    @Johnykeys Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you very much sir. Some people say putting the ac on consumes more fuel. What do you say about that??

  • @ketchup901
    @ketchup901 Před rokem

    When learning to drive in Sweden I was taught that accelerating quickly and skipping gears is good for fuel consumption. For example, if you're going from a standstill to 50 km/h, you would start in 1st gear, shift to 2nd as soon as possible, accelerate until 3000rpm, then shift to 4th. The rationale is that you spend less time accelerating (i.e. more time at a constant speed) and therefore use less fuel.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před rokem +1

      Hard acceleration uses more fuel. Here is a video I did: czcams.com/video/vEn3C4rsYs0/video.html

  • @TheDantheman12121
    @TheDantheman12121 Před 4 lety +1

    Love the socks. :)

  • @hopefulkoala01435
    @hopefulkoala01435 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey man, great video - eairy how quiet it is on the road! Silly request (and if it's too much bother/hassle don't worry) but could you upload 20 minutes or so of you driving and saying what you're doing and when when (i.e; "going into the left lane approaching the roundabout and turning my indicators on" or "getting in the right hand lane because I'm taking the third exit and turning my right indicator on" - no idea if that's correct lol, I hope so) I ask because you explain things VERY well and you're easy to understand. Knowing what to do with your feet, hands and eyes when and seeing it in a video would be incredible from someone as coherent as you.
    Sorry this is probably the 4th or 5th comment I've left in as many days on your videos but you're a really top dude for putting these up. Cheers again and be well :D

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you. I have been considering such a video so I may do it.

    • @hopefulkoala01435
      @hopefulkoala01435 Před 4 lety

      @@ConquerDriving well if you do I know I'd sure appreciate it. Look after yourself and thanks again for your help amigo 😁

  • @framedGrade
    @framedGrade Před 2 lety +1

    Hi first of all thanks for all the videos they are really helpful. Second I want to know why you prefer keeping your foot below the brake pedal? is it because of the camera? Will it not take you more time to come to brakes in case of emergency and you might stuck your foot inside it also!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety

      That's where my foot naturally rests, it's very awkward putting it somewhere else. It may take a tiny bit longer to reach the brake than if I was hovering near it, but then comfort is also a necessary consideration when driving.

  • @samwood5866
    @samwood5866 Před 4 lety +1

    Stay safe Richard

  • @destroyerwill6122
    @destroyerwill6122 Před 9 měsíci

    I did a test with my car where I accelerated more quickly while still shifting early up to the same speed and it seems to be just as efficient if not more so. This was on a semi-auto though so it may be different than on a manual

  • @lancelotbustillo6455
    @lancelotbustillo6455 Před rokem

    For me, it depends on the car, I get 42 mpg on a nissan navara diesel when going 65-70kmph at 6th speed and on a 1996 hyundai accent, I get 35 mpg going 60-70kmph on a car that is only rated at 33 mpg. I usually change gear at 2000rpm becuase I think shift at a lower rpm stresses the engine especially on the navara. Driving to fast not only creates wind resistance but the energy used to get to high speed gets wasted when you have to slow down when theres a car driving slower infront of you

  • @TimpBizkit
    @TimpBizkit Před 10 měsíci

    Usually on a flat the lower rev the better, even if 25 in 6th. On hills and driving much faster you NEED more rpm for the power.
    Although in a Cooper S I could probably do 70 mph easily at 1500 rpm if I actually had the gear ratio to do it. With 2800 rpm it will go up from 70 quite quickly if i floor it.

  • @keithsewell283
    @keithsewell283 Před 4 lety

    60mph is a suggested speed its not a mandatory target. I dont mind motaway driving but i have just spoken to my driving instructor for some extra lessons on back roads as i find them stressful. Also just to help him bounce back after the COVID 19 pandemic. I passed my test first time over a year and a half ago but still feal i need more help and the banter was good ha

  • @Chriswales
    @Chriswales Před 4 lety +1

    Great video, very informative also shows that traffic makes you use more fuel.
    How're you finding the 1.4 Leon? I have a Mk1 2003 TDI Leon and been thinking of replacing it with a MK3. Not sure if I should get a petrol or diesel, have you had many problems with your car? I normally drive 60 miles a day on the motorway and get around 55MPG from the TDI.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      It's a great car, a massive upgrade over the MK2. I haven't driven a MK1. Diesel is a bit more economical but the petrol engines are far more refined and enjoyable to use. The 1.4TSI is very good, pulls very strongly but is able to achieve good fuel economy. They're quite reliable cars, I have had various problems but I can't complain because the car has had 16,000 hours of use and most cars get scrapped after 2,500-4,000 hours of use. Repairing things is cheap which is nice.

    • @Chriswales
      @Chriswales Před 4 lety

      I wasn't impressed with the MK2 when I drove it in 2006. The MK1 is a good solid car, own mine 14 years with very few problems. I'll see what happens and if I still have to travel on the motorway later this year. Really like the idea of Adaptive Cruise Control for motorway driving, but I know only high end MK3s had it.

  • @MichaelFlatman
    @MichaelFlatman Před 3 lety

    Slight downhill over 8 miles (wormingford to colchester) I managed 74.5mpg (likely closer to around 70 if the meter is over-reading) in a 2007 honda jazz..
    All about balancing anticipation, and not annoying other road users. Warmer weather has helped my car's economy a lot (with aircon off). Furthermore getting more used to the car means i can pull off some stunts like coaxing the car up from 25mph in 5th gear (which my OBD adapter which reads ECU data onto my phone) is still efficient if you use the correct amount of gas. (25mph is ~1200rpm). Nothing dangerous required to get this mpg figure which was pleasing
    In that car (likely due to it's age) it will only cut fuel when above 1400rpm + being a 1.3 non turbo it is geared so that 70mph in 5th gear is 3500rpm. This means less distance i can glide with no fuel usage unfortunately. The exclamation mark sign (hidden dip? zebra crossing?) at 18:20 is where i would come off gas (with no fuel usage) and be exactly at 30mph for the sign.
    I do think this is one of the best videos out here on CZcams in regards to driving economically. The gauge view helps a lot.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Michael, that's a very impressive figure! My Leon used to over read and now it under reads. Seems to get less optimistic with miles but slightly more economical.

  • @tSp289
    @tSp289 Před 8 měsíci

    Tip no. 24: Ignore the 20mph speed limit in Wales. If you're in my car, you can get 52-ish mpg by just going at the natural speed of the road and staying at 1000-2000 rpm without even trying. If you try to keep to the 20 limit despite there being zero traffic and nothing on the road and a lot of hills, you sit at 2000-2500 rpm or change into 3rd and start juddering.
    I'm slightly proud to say I've seen approximately 0% of people in rural areas actually doing 20 through the villages. 30 is a safe speed in nearly every one of these places. Drakeford can shove it

  • @JustFrugalMe
    @JustFrugalMe Před 4 lety +1

    I have a Prius and that's all that I buy...thanks for these tips!

  • @JPColter
    @JPColter Před 7 měsíci

    Biggest driver enemy it's city driving . 1st , 2nd , stop , gas , biting point , clutch down , gas , biting point , brake , clutch down , on and on and on for the whole journey .

  • @PaulL42654
    @PaulL42654 Před 4 lety

    Also lorries and buses can do 50mph in single lane NSL's and 60 mph on dual carriageways. Coaches under 12m can do 70 on the motorway but are still limited to 62.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +2

      I know I made that mistake, there is a pinned comment with the correction. Thanks for letting me know, I'm stuck in 2005 I think. My music taste certainly is.

  • @FireicerCooper
    @FireicerCooper Před 10 měsíci

    Well foot under the pedals all depends on what footwear you use. Steel toe cap safety shoes would be dangerous if your foot was under the pedals.

  • @johnhall4917
    @johnhall4917 Před 4 lety +1

    Which fuel do you use? Shell/BP performance or supermarket?

  • @capri4682
    @capri4682 Před 3 lety +1

    Flint stone method gets great mpg results

  • @justindowling76
    @justindowling76 Před 4 lety +2

    Pigeons eh? Another suggestion for lockdown vid is car maintenance such as what oil do you use, when should you top up your oil and by how much and is it different in summer and winter, what screenwash you use, tablets or concentrated, general car maintenance type vibe, also you seem to know quite a bit about engines such as hp and torque, I wouldn’t have a clue!

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      I do know my fair share about cars and currently restoring my suspension on my VX220. I would make a video on this but my audience on this channel don't like maintenance and therefore I get very few views.

  • @maxmeister747
    @maxmeister747 Před 8 měsíci

    In Australia all L platers and the first year of p platers can only go 90km/h in 100 and 110 zones and trucks can only go 100, so going slower in a fast speed zone isn't that dangerous or abnormal, even in towns where the speed limit is 50, most cars go 30 or 40.

  • @boggy7665
    @boggy7665 Před rokem

    43-47 miles per imperial gallon = 35.8-39.1 miles per US gallon. 56 mpg(imp) = 46.6 mpg(us). Good for you! I have an equivalent car, a US Chev. Cruze (Opel Astra) 1.4T 6 spd. These figures about match what I'm getting. ... Here in suburban America, average speeds are higher and the need to accelerate is more frequent. I try for gentle launches, not pushing deep into the throttle (if that is needed) until the engine is into the fat part of its torque curve. I think this helps the mpg, not sure.

  • @TristanSilverwood
    @TristanSilverwood Před 4 lety +1

    I have nothing but respect for people who can drive like this, I’m not ashamed to admit I have no patience for stuff like this and the only
    Reason I get 52 mpg is because I have a 2.0 cdti diesel

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      It can be enjoyable when you make it a challenge.

    • @TristanSilverwood
      @TristanSilverwood Před 4 lety

      Conquer Driving what’s your opinion on these start and stop traffic systems in cars? Personally I always turn them off

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      I turn mine off most of the time. Depends how long I will be stopped.

  • @TherealAlibaba
    @TherealAlibaba Před 4 lety

    I get up to 65MPG on my Golf GTD 7.5. Not bad considering car is 181bhp. Gets better as engine beds in. I’m currently under 13k mileage. Good thing is not only I have a foot rest on the left I have extra space on right to put my foot. Golf is good for space and practicality. I’ve known some people get up to 68 which is better than claimed by manufacturer.

    • @Silvinjo
      @Silvinjo Před 4 lety

      Tbh, I woudnt brag myself with that since its diesel car (kinda same goes for an petrol car). Diesel cars have an DPF and EGR, and if you're keeping your diesel car under 1500rpm while driving, its just harmfull and you will soon have problems with 2 things that I said upthere. I've got 1.6TDi 77KW, and my normal routine is around ~8L on 100km wich is around 30MPG, so basically I waste a little bit more of fuel but car (engine, dpf, egr and other parts) will be thankfull to me.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      That's good economy, the Leon I'm driving is very similar to the Golf.

    • @Horizon301.
      @Horizon301. Před 4 lety

      Yeah the 1.6TDI is probably better but it’s not as powerful. 40,000 miles and while it never used to do many motorway miles, when it did it was above 70mpg, same on the A3 with the same engine as we had both in my family. Honestly great cars, it came to the point that the golf was used for everything and the larger more luxurious 7 series was just left there as a driveway queen. I had the pleasure of driving the 7.5 but a 68 plate registered in 2019 and even then they made improvements on the same engine, they made it quieter and much smoother while what looked to be a slight improvement in economy. We had that for a few weeks and did 2000 miles in it. VW are constantly improving which is great.

  • @alexpascu1985
    @alexpascu1985 Před rokem

    Hello, first of all thank you very much for all your videos. Really helped me refresh some of my driving concepts.
    One concern I have with this way of driving is that I'm not sure this is healthy for a turbo charged petrol engine.
    Isn't healthier to keep the revs above 1700 close to 2000 ? I know that fuel economy may take a hit but I think it will be better for the engine. I know that you had some portions of the trip when you were actually at 2000 rpm .
    Thanks !

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před rokem

      My engine has 190,000 miles on it and is good. Has needed a carbon cleaner but I think if you do predominantly town driving with a lot of idling that will happen. Higher revs don't necessarily mean much for heat, I think it's more to do with the sort of journeys you do as apposed to a slight difference in revs.

    • @alexpascu1985
      @alexpascu1985 Před rokem

      @@ConquerDriving great, thanks for your explanation, appreciate it!

  • @MrRAWKUS
    @MrRAWKUS Před 3 lety

    My Mini Cooper S R53 gets 18mpg, she definitely has a drinking problem but I love her 😂

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 3 lety

      That's a lot for a small car! Something wrong there I think.

  • @Trevorfoggia
    @Trevorfoggia Před 4 lety

    Hi, came across your video this evening for the first time. Very good.
    Can you give me some advice for a dsg Alhambra diesel please?
    I have tried my hardest to beat my best economy of 52mpg but would like to achieve more.
    I try to challenge this every time I go out.
    Kind regards, stay safe and well.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      Similar advice as a manual, just try to accelerate and brake as little as often, keeping to slower shorter routes will save fuel over faster longer routes too.

  • @TheMackcasper
    @TheMackcasper Před měsícem

    Adaptive cruise control when the car brakes its self does it use more fuel then?

  • @joelbonte8927
    @joelbonte8927 Před 4 lety +13

    You're tips are realy good, but an Rpm that is too low can do engine damage

    • @corne0114
      @corne0114 Před 4 lety +1

      Joël Bonte exactly

    • @withstyle7816
      @withstyle7816 Před 4 lety +2

      Only on high torque engines like diesel or turbo charged petrol and especially when the engine is cold and you demand acceleration in that rpm range.

    • @forza223bowe5
      @forza223bowe5 Před 4 lety +2

      Never labour the engine, it’s not good and makes the engine lazy. Change gear when the car tells you too

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      This is true, depends on the engine, mine is happy at the moment low rpm and has 160,000 miles. I've owned it since new.

  • @kaseykilsby1645
    @kaseykilsby1645 Před 4 lety +1

    Does your car rev match for you? If I go from 5th to 3rd I have to touch the throttle to match my revs in order to not be as hard on my synchro rings and to keep the right smooth.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +1

      My car does not auto rev match. I do it manually.

  • @george-mattgrounder-bentle9019

    Ah I see you have experienced the magic roundabout in Colchester too

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety

      I must have spent many hours of my life there by now.

  • @sandercohen5543
    @sandercohen5543 Před 10 měsíci

    If you let go of the gas, doesn't that introduce engine braking? Wouldn't it work better to coast on neutral/pushing clutch down? I understand slowing down gently using engine brake, when planning to do so anyway, but if you stop giving gas just to use less fuel when not intending to slow down, wouldn't engine braking negate this?

  • @RedFenceAnime
    @RedFenceAnime Před 4 lety +4

    imo cruise control has worse fuel consumption because it can't see the road ahead.
    There's a couple of dips in the road and I like to hold the gas pedal steady while going down and up, so I will speed up a little down and slow down a little up.
    With cruise control on it will cut the fuel down causing engine breaking and as a result struggles up, this can't be more eco.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +4

      Cruise control generally helps my economy but you can get savings by speeding up down hill and slowing down uphill. I'm quite good at doing that with the cruises control on, just press the + or - a few times.

    • @angrysocialjusticewarrior
      @angrysocialjusticewarrior Před 2 lety

      That process you described of speeding up a little and slowing down, consumes a bit more fuel than cruse control maintaining the same precise speed on the same stretch of road.
      But my comment is only made with the assumption that by "dips", you are talking about the when a highway/expressway dips.
      If by "dips" you meant small town roads or dipping bridges, then yes, switching off cruse control is more economical in those situations.

  • @antonycharnock2993
    @antonycharnock2993 Před 4 lety +1

    Managed to get 56mpg out of my SEAT Leon 1.2TSI nearly as good as my old Renault Megane 1.5dci. I live in a very hilly area with long steep hills and this was achieved on 30/40mph roads. I've never used cruise control.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety

      Very good economy. Mine is the 1.4 TSI 140ps

    • @Horizon301.
      @Horizon301. Před 4 lety +1

      Should have gotten the diesel. I went from the 1.6TDI diesel from VW Group to the 1.5TSI or 35TFSI from Audi 150PS. It’s MPG is nearly half that of the VW Golf, averages around 30-40. Hell even a 7 series can do much better - around 50+

    • @forza223bowe5
      @forza223bowe5 Před 4 lety

      The 1.4 TSI only does around 40 mpg max which is disappointing considering it is supped to do 59 mpg

    • @paradox5556
      @paradox5556 Před rokem

      @@Horizon301. your driving style is the problem then. My 1.5tsi golf gives me around 70 mpg on longer routes trying to be economical.

    • @Horizon301.
      @Horizon301. Před rokem

      @@paradox5556 I’ve driven 4 cars from VAG with the same engines, they aren’t good at all, it is the 30 or 35 TFSI though which I believe is a newer 2 litre engine, with the same power. On the A5 it’s pretty poor and it’s only marginally improved with a smaller A3. The only way I can get near 45 mpg + is if coasting and braking while following a tractor down a steep hill. I’m not a fan at all. 40TDI averages around 43mpg on an A6 so it is better. My driving technique isn’t the issue, it would be improved as the car is an auto unlike the diesel golf so it’s fair to assume it’s likely to be in the most efficient gears. Furthermore, I know how to keep revs down and to coast/use engine braking when needed. The only reason I have the petrol is because VW push them more with discounts now.

  • @bones6978
    @bones6978 Před 4 lety +1

    A small price to pay not to be bored.

  • @blessed6874
    @blessed6874 Před 2 lety

    Your videos are great but a bit lengthy. It would be fun if you trim them down to 10-15 minutes.

  • @ypsiow1008
    @ypsiow1008 Před 2 lety +1

    Would be good if you add metric units along side the Imperial, eg. km/litre, km/h...

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety +1

      I've started doing that in my later videos, thank you. 😊

  • @BurstNibbler
    @BurstNibbler Před 2 lety

    I love cruise control but what I find in my 2021 Leon FR is, if I'm going down a hill with it on, the car will brake for me, so I tend to switch CC off, knock down a gear and let the engine maintain the speed with no fuel being injected, then knock it up a gear when it goes flat again and switch on the CC.

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 2 lety

      Your car is more advanced than mine, I would like cruise control that can do it he braking also in my next car. But yes, lower gears will save you a bit of fuel.

  • @djcraney
    @djcraney Před rokem

    I noticed u didn’t mention mirror use atall while lifting ur gas pedal to slow down

  • @ikbalkhan7535
    @ikbalkhan7535 Před rokem

    Slowing down with engine brake is even better

  • @yogeswaranrajasegaran8246

    @conquer driving really very useful video bro...bro pls do a video on about "how to break the manual car without jerky feeling"🙏🙏😁😁

    • @ConquerDriving
      @ConquerDriving  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you, you need to brake gently, when the desires level of braking is met hold it steady then release the brake a bit just before you stop.

    • @yogeswaranrajasegaran8246
      @yogeswaranrajasegaran8246 Před 4 lety

      @@ConquerDriving thank you bro👍👍😁😁🙏🙏

    • @notanoob3920
      @notanoob3920 Před 2 lety

      @@yogeswaranrajasegaran8246 break or brake ? 😊 Wow my indian brother hats off to you

    • @yogeswaranrajasegaran8246
      @yogeswaranrajasegaran8246 Před 2 lety

      @@notanoob3920 haha...sorry..I mean brake😂😂

  • @estebanod
    @estebanod Před rokem

    You're so fine gosh 🤭
    I always find it scary to let the engine run at idle cause it feels like it would stall any time, in car at least, cause on bike it feels less weird

  • @neilmurphy845
    @neilmurphy845 Před 10 měsíci

    Which is more economical the limiter or the cruise control

  • @Bruno-00
    @Bruno-00 Před 3 měsíci

    I'm at 10:36, and I'm really surprised that there still was no mention about engine braking. In a lot of situation, when coming to junction, roundabout, you can drop down a gear, match rev, don't use gas, and just let the car slow down by being in lower gear.

  • @brolaf3792
    @brolaf3792 Před 9 měsíci

    Would you downshift instead of break to slow down also?