Mass Reduction and Fuel Efficiency

 

An fka study, Determination of Weight Elasticity of Fuel Economy for Conventional ICE Vehicles, Hybrid Vehicles and Fuel Cell Vehicles (see Related Documents), researched mass savings versus fuel consumption and considered the influence for different vehicle classes, driving cycles and powertrains.

A statistic often seen in the media is that a 10% reduction in mass can result in a 6 to 8% reduction in fuel consumption. The study concludes that weight elasticity values can vary from 1.9 to 8.2% (see figures below) depending on driving cycle, vehicle size, powertrain selection and whether or not the powertrain is adjusted for equivalent acceleration for the reduced weight vehicle.

 Weight elasticity values of 6 to 8% are possible with powertrain resizing for equivalent acceleration using conventional gasoline powertrains. The effect of powertrain resizing has more influence on fuel savings than does mass reduction, especially for urban driving cycles. Therefore, these impressive fuel economy gains of 6 to 8% usually are not realized in real vehicle designs for several reasons:

  • Vehicle manufacturers do not have enough engine and powertrain system options to apply to every incremental step in vehicle weight.
  • Market forces have caused significant increases in acceleration performance rather than the resizing of powertrains to equivalent performance.
  • Data collected by  the U.S. National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration in its “2004 Automotive Fuel Economy Update” and by the European Automobile Manufacturers Association indicate significant gains in engine technology over the past two decades, but this technology is applied to vehicle acceleration performance rather than to fuel economy.

When engine and powertrain system resizing is not achieved, this study concludes that weight/fuel consumption elasticity values of only 2 – 4% are applicable.

The fka study also considers advanced powertrains, such as hybrids and fuel cell vehicles. The study concludes that these advanced future drivetrains, which take advantage of regenerative braking, do not see the same large variation in weight/fuel consumption elasticity with powertrain resizing as conventional internal combustion engines do. Historically, the often-stated weight elasticity figure of 8% has not been achieved. Such a high reduction in fuel consumption will be almost totally out of reach as hybrid and fuel cell power trains become more widely used.
 

 

Influence of 10% Weight reduction on fuel consumption (HYZEM cycle)

Influence of 10% weight reduction on fuel consumption (NEDC cycle)

Bookmark and Share

1 Comments
First  |  Previous  |  Next  |  Last
Be the first to comment on this article below!
First  |  Previous  |  Next  |  Last
Please sign in below to post a comment:
User Name:
Password:
 
Or, click here to create a FREE user account.