Auto news; TheCarConnection.com’s Six Best Cars for Great Fuel Economy
Auto news; TheCarConnection.com’s Six Best Cars for Great Fuel Economy
If you’re like most of America, gas prices have made a huge impact on how you drive, how you live, and what you expect from your next new car. Prices are heading higher, gas is less available in some areas (here in metro Atlanta, it’s hit or miss finding a fully supplied station, much less premium fuel). With the obsession ..Auto news;
Enlarge Photo
If you’re like most of America, gas prices have made a huge impact on how you drive, how you live, and what you expect from your next new car. Prices are heading higher, gas is less available in some areas (here in metro Atlanta, it’s hit or miss finding a fully supplied station, much less premium fuel).
With the obsession over gas prices likely here to stay in the near-term–and who knows where prices will go once the economy stabilizes–TheCarConnection.com’s editors have sifted the data from our latest car reviews to bring you the best vehicles for great fuel economy.
TCC rates vehicles by weighing our and other reviewers’ opinions of a vehicle’s styling, performance, comfort and quality, safety, and features to arrive at an overall number from 1 to 10, with 10 being the highest possible score in each attribute. At first, we planned to rate only vehicles that offer 30+ mpg in the EPA’s highway cycle. However, neither the van nor the truck categories yielded any vehicles that could touch 30 mpg. In those cases, we looked for vehicles getting 25 mpg or better in highway mileage, which eliminated a huge swath of vehicles from contention–much as it’s doing today at auto dealerships across the country.
Not surprisingly, gas-electric hybrids won three of our six categories: Sedan, SUV/Wagon, and Green Car. The Van category, a field dominated by V-6s, was swept by a cleverly-packaged compact van. Among trucks, a stalwart four-cylinder took top honors. And among two-doors, one automaker proves efficiency can be thrilling.
Follow the links below to find out more about our numeric ratings and to read full reviews of the winners:
: The Honda Civic Hybrid, combining Honda’s IMA (Integrated Motor Assist) introduced back on the original Honda Insight, a diminutive four cylinder, and a continuously variable transmission ring in at 40/45 city/highway EPA mpg and nets our top pick as a fuel-sipping sedan. The Civic Hybrid also took our honors for the category, beating out the Toyota Prius by 6/10ths of a point.
Enlarge Photo
: Proving, as we mentioned, that fun can also be quite frugal, the BMW-designed MINI Cooper Convertible gets our nod for highest-rated, fuel efficient 2 door. The second-gen MINIs benefit from a new engine design with ultra-efficient direct injection, and in either naturally-aspirated (23/32 mpg) or turbocharged (21/29 mpg) EPA form, the MINI Cooper Convertible is a well-designed, frisky runabout with go-kart reflexes and plenty of power.
Enlarge Photo
: FoMoCo’s well-designed (and freshly-updated for ’09) small SUV gas/electric hybrid duo, the Ford Escape and Mercury Mariner, won our SUV/Wagon category. Employing a newly-designed 2.5-liter four that uses miserly Atkinson-cycle technology, the Escape and Mariner hybrids are capable of electric-only propulsion at low speeds and manage stellar EPA mileage ratings of 34/31 mpg.
Enlarge Photo
VANS: Mazda’s funky-yet-sensible Mazda5 van, our pick for the Van category, makes the most of its Mazda 3 underpinnings to offer respectable interior capacity while delivering better mileage than the competition. We found that “clever engineering makes good use of what space is available,” and in a thirsty segment the Mazda’s 22/28 EPA mpg (with five-speed manual) are downright impressive.
Enlarge Photo
PICKUP TRUCKS: As mentioned, there’s not a lot in the realm of fuel-efficient pickups, and even mid-size and small trucks make do with older-tech gasoline engines that, when combined with a truck’s aerodynamic inefficiencies, don’t do much for mpg. Our highest-rated, most fuel efficient pickup was Toyota’s Tacoma 2WD four-cylinder, which was ranked at 20/25 city/highway mpg by the EPA.
Related with this news Japan Auto Store's other car news