Hello all.
So as I was riding to see War of the Worlds last night in a friends 1998 extended-cab extended-box 5.4L V8 F150, I got thinking about fuel economy and conservation (surprise, eh?). It's an interest of mine, and one of my strong beliefs is that technology can only take us so far on conservation issues; people must learn to adapt as well.
Anyway my story ends with a decent movie, but also an idea similar to the smart power meters currently being installed in Ontario. Why not install a fuel rate gauge in the instrument panel of new cars? I thought about it for a while, but I can't see anything particularily wrong with the idea. It's been proven with the smart-meter study that when people can see the energy they're using, they will adapt to use less of it. "Out of sight, out of mind" really does apply to the electricity bill, and there's no reason to believe it wouldn't apply to the gas tank. (How many here really pay attention to their fuel bill every week? Of everyone I know, not more than a quarter of them do this...)
Some thoughts I had:
(1) It seems like it would be incredibly cheap to add -- on a digital instrument panel there'd be no cost for extra gauges, only the cost of adding any required sensors or logic to the fuel-injection or fuel-pump system to calculate the rate of use. On an analog instrument panel there'd be the cost of one extra display gauge plus added labour time at the factory to install it.
(2) I'm pretty sure on Buicks at least, it already tells you your rate of use, though it's not updated as quickly as I'm imagining. I'm thinking something that when you step on the gas and the tach spikes up, so does this "fuel rate" gauge. If I had to express it as a response time, I'd say, maybe 50 ms? I could be way off-base there.
(3) The actual fuel savings, of course, come from the behaviour change -- when you see that gauge shooting up as you floor it, you take it easier on the gas. Obviously the whole idea is useless if people can only watch helplessly as their fuel rate stays "in the red", but in this case they can do something about it -- and "eco-driving" (driving less aggressively) is supposed to save somewhere between 5% and 33% of fuel economy.
Anyway, being an engineering physicist by training and a valve designer by (current) employment, and someone who bikes to work, I know very little of current automotive systems. So I ask you, automotive eng-tips members:
- Has this been done hundreds of times before?
- How much would it really cost?
- Do you have any tips on where else to start looking or asking questions on how this could be done? Would this kind of thing be made by Tier 2 or 3 manufacturers?
- If I want to pursue this, do you think it's better to approach my MP to try to get legislation, or better to go to a PR person at an auto company and say "this'll look really good if you guys do this, here's how much it'll cost, let's talk"
- Am I totally off base here?
So as I was riding to see War of the Worlds last night in a friends 1998 extended-cab extended-box 5.4L V8 F150, I got thinking about fuel economy and conservation (surprise, eh?). It's an interest of mine, and one of my strong beliefs is that technology can only take us so far on conservation issues; people must learn to adapt as well.
Anyway my story ends with a decent movie, but also an idea similar to the smart power meters currently being installed in Ontario. Why not install a fuel rate gauge in the instrument panel of new cars? I thought about it for a while, but I can't see anything particularily wrong with the idea. It's been proven with the smart-meter study that when people can see the energy they're using, they will adapt to use less of it. "Out of sight, out of mind" really does apply to the electricity bill, and there's no reason to believe it wouldn't apply to the gas tank. (How many here really pay attention to their fuel bill every week? Of everyone I know, not more than a quarter of them do this...)
Some thoughts I had:
(1) It seems like it would be incredibly cheap to add -- on a digital instrument panel there'd be no cost for extra gauges, only the cost of adding any required sensors or logic to the fuel-injection or fuel-pump system to calculate the rate of use. On an analog instrument panel there'd be the cost of one extra display gauge plus added labour time at the factory to install it.
(2) I'm pretty sure on Buicks at least, it already tells you your rate of use, though it's not updated as quickly as I'm imagining. I'm thinking something that when you step on the gas and the tach spikes up, so does this "fuel rate" gauge. If I had to express it as a response time, I'd say, maybe 50 ms? I could be way off-base there.
(3) The actual fuel savings, of course, come from the behaviour change -- when you see that gauge shooting up as you floor it, you take it easier on the gas. Obviously the whole idea is useless if people can only watch helplessly as their fuel rate stays "in the red", but in this case they can do something about it -- and "eco-driving" (driving less aggressively) is supposed to save somewhere between 5% and 33% of fuel economy.
Anyway, being an engineering physicist by training and a valve designer by (current) employment, and someone who bikes to work, I know very little of current automotive systems. So I ask you, automotive eng-tips members:
- Has this been done hundreds of times before?
- How much would it really cost?
- Do you have any tips on where else to start looking or asking questions on how this could be done? Would this kind of thing be made by Tier 2 or 3 manufacturers?
- If I want to pursue this, do you think it's better to approach my MP to try to get legislation, or better to go to a PR person at an auto company and say "this'll look really good if you guys do this, here's how much it'll cost, let's talk"
- Am I totally off base here?