I dont know where you live but 93 is 8¢ a gal more than crap fuel, I'd rather burn cleaner fuel anyways.
PS Mark hasnt made a working chip for the 530iA yet but I voted anyways.
Yes, of course.
NO! Keep the E.A.T. in. If you keep spinning those wheels they'll eventually grip.
Snow is falling... gas prices rising... MPG going down the toilet with stop and go traffic...
Should one swap back to stock chip for winter driving where both fuel economy and power is wasted?
77 litre tank isn't cheap to fill, especially when all the torque in the world is lost crawling off the line because of the snow.
I dont know where you live but 93 is 8¢ a gal more than crap fuel, I'd rather burn cleaner fuel anyways.
PS Mark hasnt made a working chip for the 530iA yet but I voted anyways.
95 E34 530I V2.37
===========
Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy
well the power difference is marginal really.. it's there but not enough to warrant swapping back for the winter
i get better mileage with the EAT too i think
-inc
'91 e31 850
'90 e34 535
'02 CBR F4i stunt/track bike
'07 gsxr 750 stunt bike
Theorectically you should get better mileage with the EAT chip provided you don't drive it like you've got one fitted (if you get my point!)
I think I'd leave it in and just go easy on the gas pedal.
1990 E34 535iA, 215,000kms (130,000 miles).
Dual Climate, Rear Headrests, Rollerblind, M-Tech Wheel,
Memory Seats, EAT Chip, T-Stars.
Marks trial chip made a bunch more mileage than the stock chip, the JC or whatever didnt make much over stock until pounding it hard on the freeway.
95 E34 530I V2.37
===========
Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy
Well I notice in winter, I'm pulling about 14-16L/100KM versus only about 10-11L/100KM in warmer weather. That's a pretty ugly difference when the commute to work is/sometimes 90km round trip.
So with conservative and simple math, assume 100km round trip (include some weekend driving). Makes 500km a week. Assume 14L/100KM chipped or not. That's 70L a week (tank!). The difference is about 9c for 'standard' to 'premium' making $6.30 a week more or $75.60 for three months of winter. I'm getting married so every penny counts![]()
don't forget, allthough in winter a car should be more efficience then in summer, BUT because you don't want to sit in the cold, you turn on your heater.
You drive more with lights on.
All these things make a car to use more fuel.
This World Is Mine!!
There are many factors that effect winter gas mileage both positive and negative, but more so negative.
To name a few:
The car burns more fuel in the winter due to it taking longer to warm up the engine, so it stays in open loop operation longer(warm up mode) and burns rich until the engine is up to temperature.
If you have a bad thermostat that opens at a low temp, then your engine with never warm up properly and you'll get even worse gas mileage and carbon deposits.
The car idles longer after starting before driving.
A/C in the summer takes more out of your gas mileage than running the heater in the winter.
In winter the fuel is also a different blend which will effect the mileage.
But the cold air has a lot more oxygen in the winter so that improves combustion.
Headlights dont add much load difference. A lot of people drive with them on year round.
Originally Posted by TWISM
DanH
1989 535iA 254k Miles
1992 535iM 330k Miles
You have all the torque in the world? Can I have some?Originally Posted by Qube
The streets aren't congested and slipperly ALL the time, even in Toronto in winter. For those other times, I'm glad to have the chip.
"Hmmm, this is gonna take a whole lot of floorin'"
- Homer Simpson
Last edited by Jay 535i; 12-22-2005 at 10:58 AM.
Not only that, but in the US (in my state at least) ethanol is used in gas in the winter to improve emissions - this lowers fuel economy (kind of ironic, isnt it?) and causes car to perform worse.Originally Posted by TWISM
Some companys will use even more than 10%.
"10% of your winter fuel may be grown right here in the USA!
E10 Fuel is created from a 90% mix of gasoline and 10% ethanol.
Regular Gasoline will be discountinued and E10 Fuel will be required in these areas November 1 through February 29:
Oregon State: Clackamas, Multnomah, Washington, Josephine (Grants Pass), Klamath (Klamath Falls), and Jackson (Medford) counties.
Washington State: Clark County, King, Pierce, Snohomish, and Spokane counties.
You will also find ethanol blends at most other retail outlets in surrounding counties simply because it is easier to blend all fuels in one market area instead of blending different fuels to distribute to other sections of the same market."
Lowered with blue h&r(?) springs, Bilsteins, tint, 19# design 3 injectors, Dual Magnaflow
southwest WA