Subaru - sudden drop in gas mileage

Hi. I have a '96 Subaru Impreza with 220,000 some miles on it. I keep up on it's regular matience and it doesn't seem to run any different than it ever has. Recently though I have experienced some drastic loss in gas mileage. I went from getting anywhere from 25-27 then down to

22 then 20 and now when I drove back and forth to work (only about 10 miles) I can actually watch the gauge go down. What is the problem? This has occured in the last month.
Reply to
nekokage00
Loading thread data ...

I experienced a similar thing with my 98 Legacy. Gas mileage was driving me nuts. Tried the system cleaner fluids and better grade gas/ new air filter etc. Just last week the CEL came on and the code, P0136 pointed me to an O2 sensor. I replaced it this morning and drove 50 or so miles. And while it is too early to say definitively, the gas gauge needle seems to have slowed a bit on its way toward empty. Hopefully that means my poor gas mileage woes are through!

HTH,

DJay

Reply to
djay

Are you possible losing gas? From what I've heard, and experience with my own 97 Legacy Outback and some friends' cars, the fuel filler pipe can rust out and leak gas. There's a plastic piece on the bottom of the pipe that catches dirt, salt, and other road debris and eventually it causes the pipe to leak. You would probably be able to smell the gas after you filled up if it was leaking as quickly as you describe though...also, my gas gauge pretty much stopped working after my leak started.

Reply to
thomashanno

One possibility is the Engine Temp Sensor (not the temp gauge sending unit). It can keep the ECU in choke mode. Though I suspect with just a

10 mile drive, you're mileage will not be great because ,in winter, the engine may be in 'choke' mode for a coupla miles anyway.

Carl

Reply to
Carl 1 Lucky Texan

My own experiences with an O2 sensor somehow getting contaminated/blocked gave very poor mileage and a noticable loss of power. You had to be very heavy on the accelerator.... Maybe that symptom matches yours? A genuinely faulty sensor appears to give worse running problems than this- like misfires etc The problem was caused by something in one tankful of gas - performance dropped off quite quickly over 200 miles~ It took another 5-6 tanks before it finally cleared (deposit burnt off sensor??) Been fine since.

Hope that might help

Cliff

Reply to
Cliff Top

If you're in the US somewhere in the temperate zone, everyone's gas mileage has gone down noticably. That's because the winter gas now contains about 10% ethanol, which contains less energy than gasoline. Your mileage will probably go up a bit in spring. In past years, they used MTBE's which affected gas a bit less, but they've been outlawed now, and for good reason.

Reply to
wrx

MotorsForum website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.