How Many Kilometers Can One Liter of 95 Octane Gasoline Drive?
2 Answers
One liter of gasoline can drive approximately 10 to 15 kilometers. Here are the relevant details: 1. Fuel consumption per 100 kilometers: This refers to the fuel consumption of a vehicle driving 100 kilometers on the road at a certain speed, serving as a theoretical indicator for the vehicle. 2. Speed parameter: The fuel consumption per 100 kilometers is a value measured by manufacturers using a dynamometer installed on the vehicle's chassis under objective conditions, converted into speed parameters, and then calculated as the theoretical experimental fuel consumption per 100 kilometers for the vehicle model at specified speeds. Since most vehicles approach their economical speed at 90 kilometers per hour, the publicly announced theoretical fuel consumption is usually the fuel consumption per 100 kilometers at 90 km/h.
It really depends on what car you drive. Like my old Corolla with a 1.8L naturally aspirated engine could do about 12 kilometers per liter of 95-octane gas. The new hybrid Levin can easily reach 16 kilometers. But my friend's 2.0T SUV struggles to get 9 kilometers in city traffic with AC on. The most extreme case I've seen is a modified performance car - stomp the gas pedal and you'll be refueling after just 6 kilometers. So don't assume all cars consume 95-octane gas at the same rate - the differences can be huge.