darkswordsman17
Lifer
- Mar 11, 2004
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Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
technophile82,
Wind resistance affects(sp?) the amount of energy required to push your car through the air. The faster you go, the more energy that is required. And since wind resistance increases exponentially with vehicle velocity, the faster you go, the amount of energy required increases exponentially. There fore you burn more gas when going faster.
Also, it has nothing to do with being a car guy and everything to do with physics.
Yes, but that is reasoning that the vehicle is using the same gear for every speed. Mechanical efficiency allowed by modern transmissions changes optimum efficiency speed, and it varies from car to car. Even when comparing say a small SUV to a midsize sedan, where both use the same drivetrain, the main thing that makes the car more efficient is that it often weighs a good 500lbs or more less than the SUV. It takes more fuel to accelerate more mass to the same speed. Acceleration is the key area where larger vehicles added fuel consumption comes from, not maintaining speed. Yes it is a function of both mass and wind resistance, but the mass is a bigger part of it for typical driving speeds.