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Strange stuff, but driving habits can affect that sort of thing. I have friends that don't drive smoothly, but constantly dip, dip, dip into the throttle. It makes me carsick, and makes their mileage go down.
The best way to troubleshoot this is to top off the tank, then take a 40 mile trip on the freeway using cruise control at @ 70mph. If the mileage is in the high 30s, then its the driver. If the mileage is in the high twenties to 30, then its probably an issue with the car.
Troubleshoot....
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines
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I'd be almost certain that car has an 87 Octane requirement. I believe my mom's accord does, and that car has the V-6 which is no slouch.
I've run 87 in my TSX several times, which has a 91 requirement. It feels a little fuzzy around the edges with the lower octane fuel map, and economy suffers about 10 percent. Less on pure highway driving.
Cheers,
-Mirror
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines
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I doubt the engine has been appropriately broken in at 600 miles. There have been similar reports on other 'new cars', mileage tends to get better when you get past the 4k-8k mileage mark. This is also when the initial 'starter/break in' oils and fluids typically get replaced.
I wouldn't get too stressed on mileage being out of whack until after the initial break in period. Lower fuel mileage is very common on brand new engines.
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(This post was last modified: 06-19-2006, 04:02 PM by
Ceenit.)
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The vast majority of Honda products going way back have been engineered to take 87 Octane. Any Si model with the performance version of VTEC, be it a B16A, K series, or whatever, will have a 91 requirement.
For example, all 2006 Hondas (regardless of engine) except the S2000 and Civic Si have a Regular unleaded requirement. Only those two require Premium.
Cheers,
-Mirror
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines
(This post was last modified: 06-19-2006, 08:02 PM by
TheMirror.)
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Indeed, the K24 in my Acura TSX took a full 10,000 miles to truly break in. Gives me high hopes for a long, long future.
[quote name='Ceenit' date='Jun 19 2006, 11:57 AM']I doubt the engine has been appropriately broken in at 600 miles. There have been similar reports on other 'new cars', mileage tends to get better when you get past the 4k-8k mileage mark.
[right][post="22998"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines
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Honda, and to a lesser extent, Toyota, have been very successful in running high compression on their garden variety fours with regular gas. Call it good combustion chamber design, good intake charge turbulence, likely a combination of both. In theory its easier for an engine with a small bore, for example Honda's 1.6L D16, to run higher compression on less octane because the combustion chamber and cylinder size is smaller in general. Less surface area for possible pre-combustion, less distance for flame travel, etc. In our humungous 750cc per cylinder thumpers, It becomes a lot harder. If one of the older Honda 1.5s had cylinder sizes similar to the 968, it would be an inline twin
. Porsche's flat 6 has a very good combustion chamber design, but when you get into bores over 95mm (3.3L and up) on the air cooled engines, you need twin plugs to deal with all of that area.
Not quibbling with the math, flash, in theory its quite true about higher octane giving better mileage in high compression engines. With current Honda motors, methinks they are optimized to run on crappy Regular 87 from the factory and putting 91 in them would give you fractional gains, if any.
The Si is another story though, if it requires 91 from the owner's manual, you will definitely see a hit on mileage with 87.
Cheers,
-Mirror
[quote name='flash' date='Jun 19 2006, 04:34 PM']that's what was so confusing - on one page it says regular is required, but when looking at the engine specs, and seeing 10.5:1, the presumption would be requiring premium
i suspect it may be like our engine - it will run on 90, but not as well as on 93 - mileage drops about 1% per octane point - on the civic, going from 93 to 87 that would be 37 versus 40 on the 2006
but, the 2007 spec is only 22/31 anyway
[right][post="23018"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines
(This post was last modified: 06-20-2006, 04:09 AM by
TheMirror.)
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Ah, yes, there we go. Tight Honda engine combined with exaggerated throttle inputs equals poor mileage. Case closed.
It will improve as it loosens up, and mileage will also improve if the dear lady in questions smoothes out the go-pedal.
Best,
-Mirror
[quote name='Cloud9...68' date='Jun 19 2006, 07:26 PM']Got a new data point. John (my friend) topped up the tank, and then drove it about 60 miles on the highway with the cruise control set most of the way. He says he only had to make one brief stop. The result: 35 mpg. I asked him about his wife's driving style, whether she keeps her foot steady on the gas when driving at a steady speed, and he told me that she actually tends to oscillate the pedal up and down quite a bit, to the point where it is annoying if you're a passenger. So, at this point, my bet is that it's a driving style issue.
[right][post="23026"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
1993 968 Coupe 6 speed, GP White, Black/Cashmere - RSBarn Catback, and chip, airbox mod, Euro turn signals, Koni's, M030 Sway Bars, KLA Strut tower brace, Zimmerman rotors, Hawk HPS, SS brake lines