My Toyota RAV4 manual says the fuel tank holds 15.9 US gallons. I ran the RAV4 deep into the red the other day, yet it only took 12.7 gallons. Question, how far past empty has anyone ran their RAV4?
the only problem I am having in my 2006 sport is that when I am trying to figure out my gas milage i just cant go by what the tank is supposed to hold at certain lines, compared to what it is actually holding.Just filled yesterday right on a quarter, got 10.7 gallons IIRC.
A gas gauge is not a super precise measurement, nor does it need to be. And I suspect gas pump calibrations also vary more than they are supposed to, which would impact alleged fill quantity.
the only problem I am having in my 2006 sport is that when I am trying to figure out my gas milage i just cant go by what the tank is supposed to hold at certain lines, compared to what it is actually holding.
That's better than what I had witnessed.I was doing the math backwards....:wall i was taking the number of miles driven and just dividing it by say 8 gallons for a half tank. I will do the new way next fill up and let you guys know how it came out.
tis a wonderful world we live in, ain't it?:thumbs_up:That's better than what I had witnessed.
I saw a girl post that her car gets worse gas mileage as the price goes up. She was calculating miles driven by $ amount paid for the gas, LOL.
342 miles / $48 put in the tank, 7.1 mpg. Not very good gas mileage, LOL.
Now that we've had it more than a month, my wife is averaging 25 mpg, and she's no featherlite on the throttle :thumbs_up: Gotta love living out in the country.filled up tonight after a quarter of a tank, 19.8 mpg for the v6 commuting to and from college for classes and work. not too bad for mostly stop and go driving
That can't be right...I've run it close to 33 miles after the light, and even at 13 gallons to fill up, there's still almost 3 gallons left in the tank.According to this website (Tank on Empty: Toyota RAV4 ), the average distance to empty, after the light, on the RAV4 is about 33 miles.
If there are, indeed three gallons left, what is the sense of having 20% of your fuel capacity as "reserve"?My fuel gauge is on the money, extremely accurate. I've never driven it until the low fuel light comes on but doesn't that usually mean there is about 3 gallons left? I fail to see why this would be a problem :shrug:
To be even MORE accurate, get a piece of paper or a logbook, and compute for several tanks, not just one. Yes, it involves just a little more math, but all you have to do is subtract your starting mileage from your ending mileage, then divide that by the total gas that was used.If you want to get really accurate, try to use the exact same pump if possible as each pump, even at the same station, can have different cut-offs. Drive until at least half the tank is used (the more the better) to have a more accurate reading.
I've got a log book for all my vehicles; log the date, mileage, volume, and cost...what else are you going to do while you're waiting for the tank to fill?To be even MORE accurate, get a piece of paper or a logbook, and compute for several tanks, not just one. Yes, it involves just a little more math, but all you have to do is subtract your starting mileage from your ending mileage, then divide that by the total gas that was used.
The longer you do this, the less any individual error will matter. :shrug:
If you want to really find out just carry a couple gallons in one of those new totally sealed gas "cans" and run it out.Okay so I decided to get it as low as my nerves could possibly take and got it down to 20 miles left on the range and like most of you and filled 12.7 gal
I actually used to calibrate the gas gauges on all my cars, engineer style. I'd run them out in my garage by disconnecting the return fuel line and draw a diagram of the needle positions as I added a gallon at a time.