Well yeah, but think about the hit the aftermarket would take it it didn’t exist. Look at all the devises to disable it just for Jeep, there are others like Range Technology for GM, I certainly don’t know all of them that are sold. You want the economy to tank ? look at the big picture.Thats great if you drive primarily in stop and go city traffic.
Now, what about the rest of us that do primarily highway driving and seldom come to a stop (as compared to city driving). We are hauling around an extra bit of weight and obviously a more complex system with next to no benefit.
And while my driving style tends to get me the best fuel economy possible the day I become that concerned about fuel mileage is the day I start walking everywhere.
In his right hand how much fuel a small 4 cylinder engine uses idling for 3.6 minutes. In his left hand, how much fuel is used to start that same engine. Just cause I’m a helper.Can someone save me 7 minutes and just tell us how much fuel it saves, and what this guy’s credentials are?
Jason is a mechanical engineer, famous for using a white board for showing all his automotive math, and is a very big car nut.Can someone save me 7 minutes and just tell us how much fuel it saves, and what this guy’s credentials are?
I just watched it and 4%-8% is what it saved on the 4 tests in city driving. Not worth it for me either. Even though he said engineers took into consideration the more frequent starts and wear they also have a completely different/separate starter for the ASS system then the regular starter.I haven't watched that video in a while, but I believe it can save up to 4% in the city.
For me, it's not worth the wear and tear.
Maybe a bit long, but the few traffic lights I always get stuck at when driving on the outskirts of a very small city seems pretty damn close, but those are allowing for more than just 2 directions of traffic (usually 3 or 4 different roads converging, and I'll often get stuck not getting through on the first loop). I'll usually re-enable my ESS for those, but further into the city, they're a lot shorter and not worth the brief shutdown.I noticed the pic above showed the fuel for idling 3.6 minutes vs one restart. I don’t know of any stoplights that make you wait that long, so IMHO that isn’t a good comparison. Show the fuel usage for a typical time of a red light. It would be much more accurate.