Pete. (l33t FS) said:There's.... methods. Never exceed 65mph unless you can do it at manifold pressure under 15 inches of vacuum. Never let manifold pressure go over 8 inches of vacuum going uphill. If you slow down, you slow down. Basically drive off of the manifold pressure gauge, not the speedometer.
I know, but I can't do it. If I were to try to keep manifold vacuum that high while climbing hills, I would be in danger and a danger to those around me on the road. On the up-slopes on I71 that you are well familiar with, I would be down to 45MPH. In terms of power-to-weight ratio, or at least acceleration, this Matrix is every bit as bad as my Dasher diesel was. But at least with the Dasher, I could hit 58MPG.
This thread kinda makes me miss my old Mini coupe. The Coupe was a two-seater, so it's out of the questtion now--and installing a baby into the back seat of a regular Mini would be unpleasant. On the subject of MPG, the Mini was hilarious. I could push into the 37MPG range with very gentle driving, but holy cow watch out if you need to get somewhere. On my 50 mile commutes from Columbus to Springfield, I could hit that 37MPG if I were on time for work and could drive at 65 (getting positively rattled by traffic moving at least 75. If I could keep it to 70, I could still manage 32. If I drove 80, I was 26-28MPG. It was a steep drop. I think that's the BMW engine management tuning. "Oh, you want power, do you? That's gonna cost."
Oh, and air temperature had a disproportionate effect also. I easily lost 5MPG in cold air compared to hot air.