Search: Web        
powered by
Le Templar: What I Know ~

Hypermiling rules the English language!

December 27th, 2008, 2:01 pm · 1 Comment · posted by Le Templar


Original image at blogs.cars.com

A lot of people have scoffed at my hobby of hypermiling to extend my car’s gasoline mileage, thus saving money, protecting the environment and helping to defeat oil-funded terrorists. But it turns out that hypermiling really is catching on. NPR’s Talk of the Nation mentioned the issue last Friday during a segment on techie words and developments of 2008 (Hat tip to Kimberly Hundley). As the show noted, hypermiling actually was named Word of the Year by the publishers of the New Oxford American Dictionary. These experts of the English language were fascinated by the amount of attention hypermiling received after crude oil/gasoline prices skyrocketed early this summer.

As for my own techniques, unfortunately my average mileage has continued to slip, now down to about 41 miles per gallon from my early high of 45 mpg. I can point to a number of reasons including some problems I’ve had with my tires, the colder weather, and heavier commuter traffic to negotiate with school in full swing and the return of winter visitors. But I suspect the biggest factor is simply the surprising fall in gas prices over the past couple of months. Hypermiling requires a lot of focus and concentration to do correctly. Less concerned about the cost of commuting, I’m not committed to following hypermiling techniques every time I drive.

At least I haven’t fallen back into all of my bad habits.  I don’t speed. I check my tires more now (once I got the problems solved). I try to avoid stop-and-go traffic. And 41 mpg is still better than my average before hypermiling of 37 mpg. But one new year’s resolution will be to pick up hypermiling more often. Let’s see if I can boost my gas mileage again.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google

One Comment

  • Mel says:

    Le, at least you’re still trying. I suspect most folks who were all about hypermiling when gas was high don’t care anymore.

Leave a Reply

ADVERTISEMENT