Diesel always used to be cheaper than petrol when I were a lad. It only became more expensive when diesel cars became very popular, supply and demand. I reckon now that there's a swing back towards these small, efficient and powerful petrol engines, the prices are swinging back that way too.
Playtime_Fontayne wrote:"Dai Rees Supplier of Fine Automobilia. Established 2007"
Diesel is cheaper to make anyway, from what I remember reading. Requires less refinement than petrol, or something.
Of course the oil companies and forecourts will sell it for more here, as the vast majority of taxis, corporate fleet cars, rentals, trucks, trains, lorries, and agricultural vehicles run on diesel (as opposed to the US, where petrol is king). It costs them less to produce than petrol, and they'll just boost the price if demand is higher for diesel, as it's a good way of maximising profits.
2002 (D9) Peugeot 406 Coupe SE, 2.2 litre Petrol. Scarlet Red/Rouge Ecarlate/Rosso Scarlatto. Black Leather interior. SOLD
2008 (E60 LCI) BMW 525i M-Sport, 3.0 litre Petrol. Carbonschwarz Metallic. Black Dakota Leather and Myrtlewood interior.
Diesel is akin to heating fuel and that is the cheapest now that it has been for a number of years. Kerosene which is 28sec heating oil is 35p per litre today, three years ago it was 69p per litre. Gas oil which is almost identical to diesel is 35sec heating oil and I believe is the same price.
Apparently it's due to problems in S American refineries leading to greater demand on 'our' sources from N America, and since the septics don't favour diesel cars demand for petrol keeps the price high, while less demand for diesel = lower wholesale prices for us.
Clear?
2002 HDi 2.2 Exec Estate, (2008-12) (wonderful)
2003 HDi 2.2 6-speed Exec Estate (2012-19) (also a gem)
2009 Citroen C5 2.0 HDi VTR+ Estate (godawful heap)
2008 BMW E91 330i touring (great fun - murdered by a reversing SUV)
2007 BMW E91 325i touring (slower smoother quieter)
I'm currently enjoying* average MPG's of 31 in the 5-cylinder 2.5 trubot swedish tank enterprise even though I was caught accelerating 'heavily' to 35mph by the Greater Collyweston Police recently. Although my engine is literally sipping* petrol it is counterbalanced by the increase in price, great*.
The OMGMPG's are due in part* to the weekly long-haul relative visiting operation schedules.
Special mentions go out to the 4 lads in the Barried Voxhorl Coarsehair on Sat night who got 'owned' by someone who was annoyed and should know better and wanted to get home before 9pm in the Grey Volvo Saloon on the A16 near Market Deeping. Hopefully your ego has recovered by now
Cars in my care:
2021 Kia Spottage 1.6 Pez Turbo Dual Clutch Gearbox Trickery
2013 Renner Twingo - donkey work
Welly wrote:I'm currently enjoying* average MPG's of 31
That's about what yoyoII is returning, and I'm driving it like a little old lady Although, thinking about it, the consumption improved drastically on the old one when I stopped doing that and just drove it
Diesel has never got more expensive than petrol here, but then I guess the pig's urine they bulk it out with is still cheap.
Welly wrote:A slushmatic won't return decent mpg until its in top gear and stopped messing about?
Talking of messing about, 'twas fun the other day with cruise engaged on the old highway. Going up the hills it'd start slowing down so it'd shift into 3rd, reach the right speed, change into 4th. start slowing down... It's quite underpowered for what it is really.
Welly wrote:which'd be at over 45 mph?
Oooh, I dunno that What is 45mph anyway? Just a shade over 70kmh, lower than that I think. Dunno, the handbook probably says but it's in forrin
here's a question, is it better to boot it to get to speed on a motorway / dual carriageway with a short burst of very low MPG or to slowly accelerate to speed over a longer time with a medium MPG?
On a diesel definitely better to accelerate slowly. As the throttle only controls the fuel input and not the air, the less throttle you use the leaner the mixture hence better economy.