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Chevrolet Cobalt Real World MPG

295 messages,  Last post on Nov 23, 2009 at 4:23 PM

You are in the Chevrolet Cobalt Forum. Your Hosts are pat & karens

What is this discussion about? Chevrolet Cobalt, Fuel Efficiency (MPG), Coupe, Sedan


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#223 of 295
Re: 37 mpg?????????? [cbmtrx] by poncho167
Dec 26, 2008 (3:42 pm)
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Replying to: cbmtrx (Dec 20, 2008 12:23 pm)

Actually Chevy has had some pretty economical cars throughout the years. Not all Japanese cars are known for good mileage - Mazda, Mitsubishi, to name a couple.
 
Do you know how that car was upgraded to get the extra couple mpg? You may want to read up on that instead of complaining about an American car that out does your beloved foreign Japanese car.
#224 of 295
Gas mileage ain't everything by tsjay
Dec 27, 2008 (6:03 am)
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In early June 2008, when I bought my stripped down 2008 Cobalt LS with auto tranny and spoiler as the only options (no power locks, no cruise), the low sticker price, combined with the generous $2000 GM rebate, and the EPA fuel economy rating were the primary factors in my decison. This purchase was based stictly on practical considerations, and there was less "thrill" involved in buying this car than had been the case for any of my preivous new cars. (Lord knows, there had been way too many of them.)
 
The great thing about this little car is that it has turned out to be so much fun to drive, and the good gas mileage is just icing on the cake. I am no longer concerned with squeezing every single MPG out of it, and I drive it now more like I have always driven, not crazy fast or anything, but not super conservatively either.
 
That little car will get me a minimum of 27 MPG for my daily commute, including my in town trip to eat lunch each day. Sure, I could go back to driving no more than 55 MPH out of the highway and accelerating a little less aggressively in town, and that would bring the MPG up to 28.5 to 29.0. I got tired of driving that way, though, and the excitement over MPG waned. I guess the way gas prices have dropped has been a factor, too.
 
Now, don't get me wrong, I am NOT one of those people who is constantly going back and forth between the brake pedal and the gas pedal and wasting all kinds of gas. I'm just no longer going to the other extreme to maximize gas mileage.
 
I am totally satisfied with that little Cobalt. Well, I DO wish that it had cruise control. I didn't realize how bad I would miss that feature.
 
Tom
#225 of 295
Re: Gas mileage ain't everything [tsjay] by okko1
Dec 27, 2008 (8:00 am)
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Replying to: tsjay (Dec 27, 2008 6:03 am)

i had 2 small trucks ( a s10 and a ranger ) before buying my cobalt. i hated to make the drive to work and back everyday. since i got the cobalt i can't wait to hit the hiway. i get 25-28mpg and that's better than either pickup. and as for power and performance the car is plenty for me. cost was not an issue when i bought the car. looks and performance was and i feel i got both. this car is the most fun driving that i have owned.
#226 of 295
First Highway mileage by Amunhotep
Dec 28, 2008 (12:19 pm)
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2009 Sedan 1LT. Mylink Package, Auto Tranny, 16" Aluminum wheels/tires, cruise control.
 
First highway mileage drive. 166 miles, half on Interstate 65 mph using cruise control, rest on secondary highways through small towns 50-60 mph average. Easy foot, slow acceleration. Moderate hills, some headwind on the Interstate.
 
30 MPG. Driver's info shows a 25.5 mpg average. 630 miles on the car at this point.
 
A little dissapointed in this mileage, as was hoping for 33-34.
#227 of 295
Re: First Highway mileage [Amunhotep] by laserblue
Dec 28, 2008 (4:33 pm)
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Replying to: Amunhotep (Dec 28, 2008 12:19 pm)

It's absolutely normal. It's still new, give it time and your gas mileage will improve gradually. Mine was the same and after 2,000 miles it reached the normal m/p/g
#228 of 295
Re: Gas mileage ain't everything [tsjay] by micweb
Dec 29, 2008 (5:03 pm)
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Replying to: tsjay (Dec 27, 2008 6:03 am)

I've changed my driving habits and seen a shift in mpg.
 
When driven solely for my 35 mile commute, I get 33 mpg.
 
When driven mainly on the weekends to haul my kids around the city, plus one day in the middle of the week to work to "exercise" it, I get 28 mpg.
 
Even a modest amount of city driving drags down mpg significantly.
 
On the other hand my Ford Focus now gets 34 mpg (stick shift) on the commute, since it no longer has city duty.
#229 of 295
Re: Gas mileage ain't everything [micweb] by tsjay
Dec 30, 2008 (5:19 am)
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Replying to: micweb (Dec 29, 2008 5:03 pm)

Sounds very much like my experience with MPG vs. driving mix.
 
I have seen as high as 33.9 MPG on long trips, but my normal driving mix, which is mostly rural two lane roads and a little bit of city driving gets me from 27.0 to 29.0 MPG, depending on how conservatively I want to drive.
 
I have decided to be happy with the 27.0 and not drive like an old lady just to get the MPG up to 29.0. Once again, I do not drive in such a way as to waste fuel needlessly, it's just that I am no longer thinking about gas mileage every minute that I am behind the wheel. I am just enjoying having a fun little car to drive.
 
I now have 10,970 miles on that little car, and I am still very happy with it.
 
Tom
 
Tom
#230 of 295
Re: Gas mileage ain't everything [tsjay] by just84wvu
Dec 30, 2008 (7:33 pm)
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Replying to: tsjay (Dec 30, 2008 5:19 am)

I have found that even after 9300 miles my Cobalt still does not get the EPA estimated MPG that was on the chart at the dealer. I have hit 30 MPG on 2 drives. And thats 30 on the mark not 31, 32 and so on just 30. While driving in the city the car manages to get what my old Ford Escape managed to get while taking to city streets. I rarely have times where I idle at red lights so the numbers are shocking. I get told my engine needs to be driven another 2,000 miles before the MPG starts to show but in comparison to my Escape which I have had 33mpg driving the interstate many times with I should notice a change since my driving habits have changed. Who knew such a tiny car would drink gas like a Hummer.
#231 of 295
Re: Gas mileage ain't everything [just84wvu] by poncho167
Jan 02, 2009 (4:37 pm)
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Replying to: just84wvu (Dec 30, 2008 7:33 pm)

It's not such a tiny car, its one of the large compacts on the market nearing mid-size. If you want tiny go and check out a Honda Fit, Toyota Yaris, Chevy Aveo, etc. Those are sub-compacts. There is one sized car that you don't see in the states yet called a micro car. Now that is a car smaller than the sub-compacts.
#232 of 295
Well, I'm shopping today, and thanks by Blot
Jan 03, 2009 (10:15 am)
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This has been a most helpful thread, because I'm hoping to buy a new car, probably a Cobalt, but the gas mileage was something I wanted more info on. Thanks for supplying it.
 
A big reason we're leaning towards the Cobalt is that we rented one for our vacation and my wife and I found we really liked it. We got about 33 MPG on mostly open driving w/ the automatic.
 
The fact that she belongs to a "GM family" and we get the discount helps also.

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