Based on our record, Edmunds should be more popular than Fuelly. It has been mentiond 48 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I'd also recommend experimentation with new methods per each tank of gas and use fuelly.com to track and add notes to see which methods work the best for your specific Prius and use case over time. Source: 12 months ago
Sure there is. Go check out fuelly.com and tell me that you wouldn't be able to estimate pretty closely the mpg of any car you own based on that data and considering your own driving style. Source: 12 months ago
As to the data the article is using... It mentioned fuelly.com as a source. Just clicking on a few PHEVs from that website, it's abundantly clear how tiny the data set is. Nor does it seem to do much in the way of data verification. I just pulled up the listing for the Chevy Volt. Somehow I doubt there are dozens of people between 200 mpge and 500 mpge (200 mpge = 6 mi/kWh), and even 2 cars are listed at 1 mpge! Source: about 1 year ago
Fuelly.com has real-life experience for each. Source: about 1 year ago
Nice! I have a 2015 corolla LE and my best tank was 50.8 MPG on 412 miles. It was a trip from KY to OH cruising around 65 mph mostly. I average 42.8 MPG across 140,264 miles tracked via fuelly.com. If I didnt live in cold Michigan winters it would be higher. Very fuel-efficent gas-only car, definitely capable of 50+ MPG with the right conditions and certain manner of driving. Source: about 1 year ago
Edmunds.com says "Regular unleaded". Source: 6 months ago
Confronted by all these problems, I chose the only rational answer: create a database on Redshift Serverless of used car entries from edmunds.com so I can research cars with ad-hoc SQL queries and make a pub/sub alert system for high-value entries. - Source: dev.to / 8 months ago
I would check a few other sites (carvana.com, edmunds.com, allcars.com ) to compare what they say. Source: 11 months ago
You can use multiple resources. Kelly Blue Book, edmunds.com. Also simply search for a car with the same make model trim and features on used card sites to see what they are asking. Source: 11 months ago
Use cars.com or autorader.com or something similar to search new cars in your area, say a 50 or 100 mile radius, see how many new Honda Accords are in stock and watch the number, if it keeps going up, you're well positioned to make a deal. If it starts dropping significantly, it means that the dealers are selling cars and either have strong incentives (which you can look up edmunds.com) or people are panic buying... Source: 12 months ago
Fuelio - Track your fill-ups, fuel consumption, fuel costs and save money.
DealerRater - Dealer Rate is a versatile car dealing platform that is specifically designed to help dealers sell cars more efficiently and fast.
GasBuddy - GasBuddy lets you search for Gas Prices by city, state, zip code, with listings for all cities in the USA and Canada. Updated in real-time, with national average price for gasoline, current trends, and mapping tools.
AutoBINGOOO - AutoBingooo will search in all the important local and international portals for you.
My Car - The application allows you to quickly and easily manage the traffic of your cars.
Kelley Blue Book - New & Used Car Price Values