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Article Title:
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The Top Half Dozen Gas-Saving Myths In Automobile Driving Today

Article Description:
====================

More especially in these current times of consumer anxiety about
the high cost and escalating prices of gas, a growing number of
fuel-saving myths and bogus claims have developed, or grown
stronger, among American and Canadian drivers understandably
anxious to find a way out of the problem. This article, largely
excerpted from the author's latest book, 'Boost Your Auto Fuel
Economy & Cut Your Gas Costs by At Least 50 percent,
Guaranteed,' describes, for the education and benefit of
consumers, some of the major fuel-savings myths that abound.


Additional Article Information:
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3092 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-02-25 11:00:00

Written By:     Benji O. Anosike
Copyright:      2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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The Top Half Dozen Gas-Saving Myths In Automobile Driving Today
Copyright (c) 2008 Benji O. Anosike
GetAutoFuelSavings.Org
http://www.GetAutoFuelSavings.Org



As North Americans (Canada and United States citizens), more
especially Americans, our legendary romance and "love affairs"
with the automobile is increasingly becoming less and less a
"cheap date," considering today's prohibitive gas prices at the
pump. Given this climate, perhaps inevitably, many myths, to
which many die-hard consumer converts would often readily swear
by as though the gospel truth, abound plentifully in these
countries (and, of course, in other countries) among motorists as
to which measures and products or devices do supposedly bring
about gas savings to the driver, improve fuel economy, and a
higher mileage per gallon or litre.

In this article, we shall expose some of the major myths, while
trying to dispel them.

Why So Many Myths And Scams Abound In These Times About
Gas-Saving Products & Devices.

But first, why do myths particularly proliferate in these present
times? Quite simply, the major explanation offered by industry
experts, is that historically, in times when the price of
gasoline spikes up – as has in fact been the case  at the present
time (late 2006, and early 2007 to early 2008) when the price of
gasoline is again setting record highs -- there has often been  a
corresponding rise in the number of companies and persons who
peddle some half-baked "gas-saving" schemes and gadgets to
consumers which purport to stretch their gas dollars if only they
just buy them and use them in their vehicles.

David Ellis, a staff writer with CNNMoney.Com and expert on
gasoline-economy methods, explains it this way: "[In truth],
using a special additive or cutting off your A/C won't really
cut your gasoline consumption. But myths like these run rampant
in the minds of American [and other] drivers. So, you attempt a
half-baked scheme [any way, in the hope] to stretch your gas
dollars."

Summed up simply, the thesis is that in times of high and
escalating fuel prices, because motorists are eager to find
shortcuts or even miraculous ways to save or cut down on their
fuel costs, they are often more gullible and susceptible to bogus
fuel-saving claims and remedies – to MYTHS!  SOME OF THE MORE
POPULAR GAS-SAVING MYTHS AROUND Listed below, are some of such
major fuel-saving myths that abound.

Myth #1: That leaving your vehicle's windows rolled down when
driving, will appreciably affect your fuel economy and in a
negative way.

Hard Fact: Oh yes, I know there's this old theory that says that
leaving your windows rolled down, especially at highway speeds,
creates an aerodynamic "drag down" on your car, which is then
supposed to cut down on your fuel efficiency. And yes, the
predominant traditional notion has been that, especially at
highway speeds, it's more fuel efficient to use internal venting
or air conditioning than to drive with the windows down, and that
in slower driving conditions, such as city driving, you're to
keep the windows down and avoid the air condition in that it uses
more gas.

Ok. Let's get this clear. True, there are some pieces of truth
here and there in the above described scenario. But here's the
point. Get this: actually, going by the latest scientific
findings based on actual, on-the-ground tests, this proposition
is not quite so. The Consumer Reports and the research-oriented
automotive Web site, Edmunds.com, looked at this question in two
separate studies conducted in 2005: how does running the air
conditioner or A/C, in contrast to opening the windows, affect
the fuel economy of a vehicle (in this case a sedan and an SUV),
one way or the other, at highway speeds? And their findings?
"Nice in theory: [but] not true in practice," was how they
summed up their conclusion, adding, "Cold hard fact: No
measurable difference (unless you open the sunroof, too!)."

Evaluation Method Used: The Edmunds.com researchers drove a 55
mile-loop in two cars at equal speeds both times - 65 mph. "The
first loop, we drove with the A/C on and the windows up. The
second loop we drove with the A/C off and windows down. In the
second test we drove 20-mile loops. This was far enough to see
our gas mileage level off and remain steady on the computer trip
meter."

Conclusion: Put in just a little more detail, based on the hard
facts from the evaluation of these two highly respected
independent authorities (the conclusions were reached separately
and independently from each other), the finding is that, in the
case of the use of the air condition, running the air conditioner
did in deed draw power from the vehicle's engine, thereby
wasting some fuel, quite alright. But that the 'drag down'
effect, at least in more modern vehicles, only reduced each
vehicle's fuel economy by about 1 mile per gallon, which is a
difference that is not really significant - unless, of course,
you drive an already gas-guzzling SUV. And in regard to the
effect of  the use of the windows, the study's finding is that
while opening the windows does, in fact, increase the aerodynamic
drag on a vehicle, it does not have a measurable effect on the
vehicle's fuel economy even at highway speeds; and, further
more, that in any case, since putting the windows down does tend
to increase drag on the vehicles, it cancels out any measurable
gain in fuel economy obtainable from turning off the A/C. The
study only found, however, that there's one situation when the
use you make of the air condition as compared to the windows,
could make a difference. And that is when the driving involves
driving around town or in city driving conditions. In city or
town driving on common errands, you might have some gas savings
by rolling down the windows, in stead of using the A/C, the study
says.

Recommendation: If you are really serious about finding a measure
that will get you meaningful fuel economy, you had just better
forget this method, particularly when it concerns driving in
highway conditions, or when a more modern vehicle is the vehicle
in use. Just do what you find most comfortable for yourself
personally when driving on the highway; what gives you the most
comfort and convenience, and make your decision as to whether or
when to turn on your air condition or roll down the windows,
based on that, and forget about having much effect on fuel saving
altogether. If the driving involved concerns city or urban
driving circumstances, however, it might pay you in such a case
to use your air condition less and rely more on rolling down the
windows for cooling off.

Myth #2: That if you put a "higher quality" (i.e., higher grade
or higher octane rating) gas in your tank, you'll get higher
fuel economy.

Hard Fact: In recent times of astronomical fuel price rises, a
fierce debate has sometimes raged over gas quality and what grade
of gas motorists should put in their vehicles for maximum engine
efficiency and fuel economy. There have been some motorists
around Canada and the United States who strongly insist that they
just can't "get down to putting inferior gas" in their darling
vehicles' tanks, on the belief that "inferior" fuel (by which
they mean a lower octane type fuel) is either harmful to their
engine, or causative of lower fuel efficiency, or both.

"Some motorists pay the extra cost for premium fuel even though
it is not recommended by the manufacturer of their car," noted
one expert, Philip Reed, an Edmunds.com writer on gas-savings
issues in a June 2005 commentary, almost painfully lamenting
about such a conduct. "They seem to feel this is a reward for a
hardworking car."

"Some NASCAR fans told us they use upper-grade gas because they
say it gives them a little bit better mileage, more power and a
cleaner engine," reported investigative reporter John Stossel of
the ABC-TV News 20/20 program in a July 2006 program titled "Gas
Savers: Myths and Secrets."

What a big myth, however! In deed, experts are almost unanimous
about what they consider should be almost universally the ideal
thing to do in this circumstance: the only right fuel choice
that's best for your engine, they generally say, is simply the
fuel grade recommended in the Owner's Manual that's provided
you by the vehicle's manufacturer, pure and simple!

"Your car will perform the best when you use what is recommended
in your owner's manual," says Elaine Beno, an auto expert with
the Southern California Auto Club, echoing the view almost
universally held by most experts. Yet, this generally agreed fact
notwithstanding, "Lots of people are fooled," reported the July
2006 ABC-TV 20/20 investigation, adding that "Just this week,
cops arrested eight men for allegedly passing off regular gas as
premium [grade gas] at New York gas stations."

Reccommendation: There's only one BEST (and most cost-effective)
grade of fuel that you should almost always use, and that's the
one that's recommended in your Owner's Manual by your car's
manufacturer, period.

Myth # 3: That driving a pick up truck with the tailgate down
(rather than drawn up) will decrease wind resistance, and
therefore increase your fuel efficiency.

Hard Fact: Not true. A long-standing belief more particularly
common among urban motorists, has been that driving a pickup
truck with the tailgate down (i.e., open) will decrease
aerodynamic drag or wind resistance, and therefore result in
greater fuel efficiency and savings for the vehicle. Not so,
however, according to a 2004 scientific study done on it. In
fact, says the study (titled "Pickup Truck Aerodynamics - Keep
Your Tailgate Up," published by the National Research Council of
Canada), despite what you may traditionally have thought, keeping
the tailgate down (or using a mesh tailgate in its place)
actually has the opposite effect - it increases, rather than
decrease, wing resistance. According to this research, this has
to be the case because when the tailgate is up (as the
researchers say it ought to be), a bubble of air forms in the
truck bed, and air flows more smoothly over and off the truck,
without as much drag. The researchers' sum up their findings
this way: "the removal or the lowering of the tailgate increases
the aerodynamic drag of a pickup truck, increases lift by up to
60 percent, and increases the yawing moment. All these changes
are negative and reduce vehicle performance." The overall
effect, they say, is energy wastage and pollution increase.

Recommendation: Rather than keep your pickup tailgate off or open
(as had previously been conventionally believed or preached),
keep it on and closed for as long as and whenever possible.
Removing or just lowering the tailgate (or even just using a
porous tailgate replacement), causes considerable drag increase
on the vehicle, and thus increases fuel consumption; and should
only be done, if ever at all, if, for example, the load so
dictates it.

Myth # 4: That the 'best time' (in terms of price) to buy
gasoline is on a Wednesday.

Hard Fact: You may have heard this one, especially lately when
the gasoline price has skyrocketed to record highs (in late May
of 2007, for example, the average price of a regular grade gallon
of gas was recorded for the U.S. to have hit $3.087, a third
record in a row, and $2.15 for Canada, a recent 2-year high). The
story among many drivers is that the "best time" to buy gas in
terms of getting the cheapest price, is on a Wednesday. Believers
say that this is so because, according to them, this is when pump
prices are supposed to have cooled from the weekend run when oil
companies typically raise prices.

Not so, though, say the experts. Tom Kloza, the President and
chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service, says this
about it in a May 2007 CNNMoney.com interview. It is true, Kloza
explains, that gas prices tend to be higher on the weekends, but
there is really no ideal day of the week to purchase your gas in
that gas prices fluctuate randomly and unpredictably owing to
many market variables, forces and factors. Geoff  Sundstrom of
America's premier motorist organization, the AAA, pretty much
concurs. He notes that gas prices fluctuate from day to day, and
are determined by gas stations, and says that these gas stations
look at a variety of factors in making such determination,
including the wholesale prices of gasoline at a given tune, the
competitors' prices, and the food and drink sales, if they have
an attached convenience store, and so on.

Reccomendation: Your best bet? "Bargain hunting" for
inexpensive or cheaper gas, experts say, is the best remedy for
finding the best gas prices, and the consumer's efforts should
better be directed to systematically checking out certain sites
on the Web which are known to be good at enabling consumers to
find the cheapest gas available in their areas simply by entering
their zip code information. MYTH # 5: That starting up and
turning off your car repeatedly is a major fuel waster for the
average motorist.

Hard Fact: Many drivers firmly believe (still) that starting up
and turning off the vehicle repeatedly is a fast way to drain
one's gas tank of its gas. This is not so, though, say the
experts. At least, not any more. That might have been true back
in the old days, when cars were equipped with carburetors. But
not any more, not these days when we have the modern
fuel-injection technology. In deed, modern gas technology, as
well as almost every respected contemporary automotive expert,
including Rik Paul, the automotive editor of the Consumer Reports
publication, overwhelmingly support the common view that today's
drivers actually save gas, rather than lose it, by turning off
their engine completely than letting their vehicle remain
needlessly idling. According to evidence cited by the Office of
Energy Efficiency (OEE) of Canada, studies show that frequent
restarting of the vehicle has little impact on engine parts, such
as the battery and starter motor, and that "The wear on
components that restarting the engine causes adds [only] about
$10 a year to the cost of driving," adding that such paltry
amount of money is money you'll likely recover several times
over in savings from reduced idling you shall have gotten by just
not starting and turning off the engine at all, in the first
place.

Recommendation: Don't necessarily shut down the engine every
time you get stuck in traffic. But if it looks like you'll be
stuck in traffic for a reasonable length of time, in deed for
anything over 30 seconds or 1 minute, then you ought to
immediately turn off your car, for then, it's almost certain
that you will be able to conserve a fair amount of fuel by doing
that.

Myth # 6: That some additives, lubricants, and special gadgets
and devices that are often commonly peddled to consumers as
"miracle" products that improve a car's fuel efficiency,
generally work.

This, perhaps, is probably the biggest and most costly myth for
most motorists today in the United States and Canada. Here's the
question: considering the increasingly higher and higher price of
maintaining the societal "love affair" with the automobile for
the North American automobile owner in this age of
record-breaking gasoline prices, are there really any true
gimmicks, shortcuts or "secrets" out there that would allow you
to get higher mileage for your dollar? Well, to hear many
companies, advertisers and marketers around the nations who
peddle these purported fuel-saving products tell it, especially
during the times when gas prices are climbing astronomically (as
is the case in the present time), there are. And, all you'll
need to do is to buy some of the products and gadgets they market
and use them in your vehicle, and bingo, they'll surely save you
plenty of gas and give you better fuel economy!

The TV infomercial for one of  the more frequently advertised of
such products, a fuel additive named Tornado Fuel Saver, is
typical. It claims that "its fast and easy installation can save
you up to $20, $40, even $60 a month at the gas pump," while its
company President, Mr. Jay Kim, in his own infomercials plugging
the Tornado product, literally swears by it, as he claims that
"People put Tornado in [their vehicles], they are so happy with
the product, they tell a friend. So I'm very confident that
[the] product works."

But, do such products and gadgets that are frequently advertised
and appetizingly peddled to eager motorists as huge
"gas-saving" solutions – items that range from dropping some
green pills into a fuel tank (as in the case of a product called
BioPerformance, for example), to doing something like installing
copper tubing, cheap magnets, and wacky gimmicks -  really boost
your mileage, and by as much as 300 percent or so, as many
salesmen like these often advertise?

Hard Fact: Here, we'll simply indicate what the actual,
objective, scientific FACT is on this in terms simply of the
proven, actual road and lab tests results by independent,
credible product testing institutions and evaluators which have
put those products and gadgets to the test under proper
scientific and technical conditions. Anything else are merely
sales claims and FICTION which lack any scientific or
independently verifiable backing.

 * The Federal government's Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), America's most trusted Number One and official testing
agency for all such gas-saving devices, has tested some 109 of
all manners of these products and devices. Hear Ms. Margo Oge,
the director of the EPA's office of transportation and air
quality: "The devices and the additives we have tested just
don't work. We have been doing it for 35 years, and we have seen
pretty much everything that can be imagined. [Leading us to
believe that they generally just don't work]." (To check out
the list of those 109 devices that has been tested over the years
by the EPA, go to web site at
www.epa.gov/otaq/consumer/reports.htm.)

 * Or, take it from the Consumer Reports test mechanics experts,
who've tested several dozens of these items: "This isn't news.
We've tested such devices over the years...The results: We have
not found any that improve fuel economy....Our advice: Don't
waste your money. They [just] don't work."

There Are Genuine Fuel-Saving Remedies That Actually Work And
Deliver

Are there some legitimate ways, remedies and strategies that are
available which are genuine and real, and can really deliver
substantial fuel economy and fuel and cost savings for you?  You
bet! In deed, absolutely so! In my next or future write up, I
shall fully outline some of that.




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Benji O. Anosike, Ph.D., a long-standing expert on self-help 
cost-saving consumer techniques, is the acclaimed author of 
the best-selling auto expense management book, How to Settle 
Your Auto Accident Claims Without a Lawyer. Called “probably 
the most prolific writer in the field of legal self-help in 
America today” by the Booklist Journal, the official literary 
organ of the American Library Association, Dr. Anosike is the 
author of over 24 books in the area of self-help on various 
topics of American law and human life. His latest book, a bold 
study just released, is titled “Boost Your Auto Fuel Economy &
Cut Your Gas Costs by At Least 50%, Guaranteed,” and exposes 
both the bogus fuel-saving remedies and schemes that don’t 
actually work, and the emerging new kinds of remedies and
strategies, as well as new advanced automotive science, that 
have been verifiably proven to yield dramatic fuel economies 
and savings to the average motorist who employs them. For more 
on the author or his works, or on the study or how to drastically
reduce your current automobile gas use and bills, visit: 
http://www.GetAutoFuelSavings.Org


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