GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #34 | Page 14

THE TEST THE NUMBERS A run up to the shops and back wouldn’t cut it. To achieve a meaningful result, I figured a couple of hundred kilometres per van was required. At Goldstream’s Pakenham, Vic, headquarters, I first hitched up the pop-top to my Isuzu MU-X and headed to the nearest fuel station, where I topped up the diesel to the point that it was almost overflowing. THE POP-TOP From there, I headed east towards Traralgon, a regional Victorian city about two hours from Melbourne. In Traralgon, I intentionally spent 15 minutes in stop-start traffic before heading back. On refilling at the same Pakenham servo, it was revealed that by towing the pop-top for 209.8km, the 4WD’s 3L engine guzzled 30.63L of diesel. Towing the pop-top – which had been loaded up to closely match the full-height caravan in weight – on a highway for a couple of hours, throwing in a bit of around-town traffic, saw the MU-X use 14.6L/100km of diesel. This equates to 6.85km/L. THE CARAVAN Towing the full-height caravan on the same course, and matching my driving style to that of the first run as much as possible, saw the vehicle consume 16.7L/100km, equating to 6km/L. Time for the second test. I repeated the scenario described above, this time with the full-height van hitched up. On the highway, for both tests, I kept my speed to about 95km/h, keeping to fifth gear as much as possible, and driving as smoothly as conditions allowed. The pop-top saw the vehicle consume 30.63L over 209.8km. After almost six hours of continuous driving, I pulled into the servo near Goldstream for the third time that day. The odometer, which I’d zeroed before departing for the second run, read exactly as the previous test: 209.8km. Pleased, I refilled, sure that my vehicle had used more fuel on this second test. I was surprised, though, when the diesel pump returned a figure of 34.96L – an increase of 4.33L. That seemed like a lot. But was it really? 14 \ As expected, the full-height caravan was more expensive to tow.