2000 Honda Accord260k miles4cyl veetackwhiteI've seen a drastic drop in mpg in the last few weeks. I'm losing about 80-100 miles per tank, or ~7-8mpg. Nothing has been changed mechanically, and my driving habits have been the same. Temperature is steady, just under the halfway mark. So I don't think the thermostat is stuck open. The car is running fine, acceleration is normal, idle is normal. I can't find any leaks. Ideas?
9/26/2014 1:12:00 AM
O2 sensor
9/26/2014 8:01:38 AM
Possibly a clogged catalytic converter. Have you ever had it changed? 260k miles is definitely enough to clog it.
9/26/2014 8:03:56 AM
^I'm wondering the same thing.
9/26/2014 8:34:28 AM
The cat was replaced at around 100k. I would assume that if an o2 sensor were bad enough to make the mpg drop this much it would throw a CEL. Up and downstream o2 sensors have been replaced in the last 50k anyway.
9/26/2014 9:20:01 AM
Guys, come on. The diagnosis is pretty simple...He's low on VTEC fluid. You're welcome
9/26/2014 9:25:16 AM
This is actually a type r veetack, not backwards compatible with VTEC fluid.
9/26/2014 9:50:39 AM
this is probably a dumb question, but you just never know with some car owners...how is your tire pressure?
9/26/2014 9:55:44 AM
the problem might be that your car is white. Maybe paint it another color?How are you tracking your mileage? Curious of your methods. Do you always fill up at the same station?
9/26/2014 9:57:44 AM
also, even though your habits are the same, are you driving te same routes?my 91 civic got 36 avg on my weekend trips home from NCSU, however around Raleigh it got ~24
9/26/2014 10:25:47 AM
Mileage tracking: Fill up, reset odometer, divide mileage by total gallons of next fill upDifferent stations all the time.Tire pressure is good.I'm all over the place with routes, but I've been driving this car for 10 years, so I know about what mileage I should be getting at any given time. I did notice that when I have a tank that's almost strictly highway miles the mpg doesn't seem to suffer as much.
9/26/2014 10:43:20 AM
9/26/2014 10:59:24 AM
What fuel do you fill up with? I'd imagine 87 octane? Sometimes older engines prefer higher octane fuel due to carbon build up within the engine. If you have some build up, there's a chance the 87 octane could make the engine knock more often, which would prompt the ECU to retard timing and reduce engine efficiency.That's really a bit of a stretch, but it wouldn't take much effort to see what results you get with a different octane.
9/26/2014 12:29:15 PM
9/26/2014 5:13:08 PM
I was losing 2-3 mpg with a bad fuel pump o-ringany signs of gas vapor leakage? smell, blackened fuel door, etc?
9/29/2014 4:33:56 PM
9/30/2014 1:56:10 PM
slip a dryer sheet over the exhaust outlet and secure it with a rubber band. drive around with it on for a day. when you remove it there shouldn't be a black circle. if there is you know you are running rich. that will let you know you do have a a/f ratio error and not just shitty gas.[Edited on October 1, 2014 at 8:29 AM. Reason : -]
10/1/2014 8:28:16 AM
10/1/2014 9:33:07 AM
yes. the end of the exhaust pipe. shouldnt melt the rubber band. and only one side will be sufficient unless one side flows a lot more than the other.
10/1/2014 7:01:12 PM