What does 'a few liters of fuel consumption' mean?
1 Answers
When people commonly refer to 'a few liters per hundred kilometers,' it means the amount of gasoline consumed by a car traveling one kilometer, which is also a standard for measuring the approximate fuel consumption of a vehicle. The value may vary depending on different conditions. Here are some related explanations: 1. Fuel consumption: The fuel consumption per hundred kilometers is an indicator for vehicles. The standardized statistical norm for operating condition fuel consumption is that the slower the vehicle travels within the economical speed range, the higher the fuel consumption per hundred kilometers. Since most vehicles approach their economical speed at around 90 km/h, the theoretical fuel consumption publicly announced is usually the fuel consumption per hundred kilometers at 90 km/h. 2. Calculation of fuel consumption: If the engine speed is maintained within the same safe range, regardless of the vehicle's speed, the hourly fuel consumption remains the same. When calculating fuel consumption for highway driving and engineering transportation, the first two norms are not suitable, and calculating by hourly fuel consumption is more accurate. The formula for hourly fuel consumption is: Fuel consumption per hundred kilometers / 100 * limit speed * 0.8 (the limit speed is the highest safe speed).