How Many Kilometers Can 1 Liter of Gasoline Drive?
1 Answers
A 1.6L displacement car as an example, for long-distance driving, 1 liter of gasoline can approximately drive 16.67 kilometers. If driving on general urban roads, the fuel consumption is about 8 liters per 100 kilometers, so 1 liter of gasoline can approximately drive 12.5 kilometers. Below is the meaning and related introduction of fuel consumption per 100 kilometers: Meaning of fuel consumption per 100 kilometers: Generally, a small car can drive about 10 to 15 kilometers with 1 liter of gasoline. Calculation method: distance driven per liter of gasoline = 100 / fuel consumption per 100 kilometers. Fuel consumption per 100 kilometers refers to the amount of fuel consumed by a vehicle driving 100 kilometers at a certain speed on the road. It is a theoretical indicator of the vehicle. The fuel consumption per 100 kilometers is a value measured by the manufacturer in an objective environment using a dynamometer installed on the vehicle chassis, converted into speed parameters, and then calculated as the theoretical experimental fuel consumption per 100 kilometers of the vehicle model at specified speeds. Considering whether it is close to the economic speed: Since most vehicles approach their economic speed at 90 km/h, most of the publicly announced theoretical fuel consumption is usually the fuel consumption per 100 kilometers at 90 km/h. (Displacement is determined by analyzing the carbon content in the exhaust gas using an exhaust analyzer and the carbon balance method). The most significant expense in vehicle maintenance is fuel costs, so when purchasing a car, it is essential to consider the vehicle's displacement and fuel consumption.