Greener Cheaper Motoring
Your driving habits, the type of vehicle you drive and the conditions under which you drive will affect your vehicle's environmental performance. Follow these tips for greener driving to save money on your fuel bill and at the same time minimizing the possibly dramatic effects of greenhouse gases on global warming.
Keep your car engine in good shape
Keeping your vehicle well tuned will minimise its environmental impact. Clean air filters keep impurities in the air from damaging the engine and can improve fuel economy.
To keep your engine in top physical performance use Nulon’s Total Fuel System Cleaner. Treating one tank of fuel will clean fuel injectors, inlet valves and combustion chamber deposits giving you a cleaner, smoother engine. Try Total Fuel System Cleaner today and feel the performance and fuel economy improvement immediately.
You can check the fuel economy improvement by writing down your average l/100k and checking it in a few weeks time.
Minimise your vehicle use

Think about your travel needs prior to your travel. Planned travel decisions will result in fewer trips and more efficient/cheaper travel than unplanned decisions made 'on the go'. Some travel planning tips:
- Plan to do a number of errands in one trip rather than several trips and save both time and fuel (for the first couple of minutes of a car trip the engine is cold and this results in an increase in fuel consumption per kilometre).
- Patronise shops near to you whenever possible to reduce the distances you travel by car. Walk or cycle to your local shops if you can.
- Avoid peak-hour traffic whenever possible.
- Avoid hilly terrain – you will use more fuel going up hill.
- Use alternative transport, eg. public transport (bus, train, tram or ferry), walking or cycling. These alternative methods of travel are often cheaper, and may provide other benefits including increased fitness.
Drive in high gear and safely
The engine runs most efficiently between around 1,500 and 2,500 rpm (lower in diesels). To maintain these low revs you should change up through the gears as soon as practical and before the revs reach 2,500 rpm. Automatic transmissions will shift up more quickly and smoothly if you ease back slightly on the accelerator once the car gathers momentum.
Drive smoothly - avoid unnecessary acceleration
Drive at a good distance from the car in front so you can anticipate and travel with the flow of traffic. You will be able to see such things as traffic lights changing or cars turning and minimise your fuel use through braking and accelerating back up to full speed.
Minimise fuel wasted in idling
Minimise fuel wasted in idling by stopping the engine whenever your car is stopped or held up for an extended period of time. By having the engine switched off, even for a short period, you will save more fuel than is lost from the burst of fuel involved in restarting the engine. The net increased wear and tear from this practice is negligible.
Speed kills economy.
Speed kills economy
High speeds result in high fuel consumption. At 110 km/h your car uses up to 25% more fuel than it would cruising at 90 km/h.
Minimise aerodynamic drag
Additional parts on the exterior of a vehicle such as roof racks and spoilers, or having the window open, increases air resistance and fuel consumption, in some cases by over 20%.
Look after your vehicle's tyres
Inflate your vehicle's tyres to the highest pressure recommended by the tyre manufacturer and make sure your wheels are properly aligned (remember to keep your spare tyre inflated as well). Looking after your tyres will not only reduce your fuel consumption it will also extend tyre life and improve handling.
Use air conditioning sparingly
Don't turn on the air conditioner as a first response to heat. Air conditioners can use about 10% extra fuel when operating. However, at speeds of over 80 km/h, use of air conditioning is better for fuel consumption than an open window.
Travel light
Don't carry more people or cargo than you have to. The more a vehicle carries the more fuel it uses; an extra 50kg of weight can increase your fuel bill by around 2%.
Service your vehicle regularly





