Originally Posted By: fdcg27
And you base your estimate of what the car "should" get upon what?
I don't know about you, but I'd find 38 highway to be pretty good.
Isn't that a whole lot better than what you're now driving?
Why is that a problem?
Because in your opinion, the car should get even better mileage?
Because your opinion is also that cars could once typically beat their EPA mileage ratings, but now, for some unexplained reason, can't?
From my point of view, the Fiat 500 is an attractive and fun to drive car that would work out just fine as a daily driver.
The fact that it delivers exceptionally good fuel economy is icing on the cake.
That somebody thinks it should deliver even better fuel economy is irrelevant.
My current vehicle is a Corolla which gets 38 MPG. Considering my Corolla is bigger and heavier than the 500, the 500 should get considerably better mileage. That isn't what I think, it's physics.
And you base your estimate of what the car "should" get upon what?
I don't know about you, but I'd find 38 highway to be pretty good.
Isn't that a whole lot better than what you're now driving?
Why is that a problem?
Because in your opinion, the car should get even better mileage?
Because your opinion is also that cars could once typically beat their EPA mileage ratings, but now, for some unexplained reason, can't?
From my point of view, the Fiat 500 is an attractive and fun to drive car that would work out just fine as a daily driver.
The fact that it delivers exceptionally good fuel economy is icing on the cake.
That somebody thinks it should deliver even better fuel economy is irrelevant.
My current vehicle is a Corolla which gets 38 MPG. Considering my Corolla is bigger and heavier than the 500, the 500 should get considerably better mileage. That isn't what I think, it's physics.