Cut Your Fuel Consumption By 30% by Fixing a 30-Year-Old Mistake in Your Car
Allan Miller
1.3M subscribers
247 CommentsSort by: Top
@kkepdawg1 hour ago
Did anyone try it already?
@JohnFallon1 hour ago
yeah I did it and my mileage went from 35mpg to 47mpg... I'm sharing this with everyone
@AmericanOne9611 day ago
I KNEW IT!! I'm getting ripped off! Not anymore!!!
@timothysands2 hours ago
Yeah, my wife was trying to blame the crazy gas bills on me leaving the AC running in the car and doing too many short trips around town. That is after I showed her the math and the gas receipts and explained that nothing about our driving habits could possibly burn through that much fuel.
@mikemold_1 hour ago
Also totally agree with this, no freaking way the math can work out in a way that my 4-cylinder Honda is responsible for $380 a month in gas. I barely drive 20 miles a day. I'm in Arizona btw.
@PersonalBrowser1 hour ago
Anyone else get absolutely crushed at the pump this month? The 2026 gas prices are brutal.
@RoseBudny1 hour ago
I have heard that the problem is that the oil companies are increasing refinery margins and blending costs to protect their quarterly profits, and so those costs get passed down to consumers as higher prices per gallon.
Did anyone try it already?
yeah I did it and my mileage went from 35mpg to 47mpg... I'm sharing this with everyone
I KNEW IT!! I'm getting ripped off! Not anymore!!!
Yeah, my wife was trying to blame the crazy gas bills on me leaving the AC running in the car and doing too many short trips around town. That is after I showed her the math and the gas receipts and explained that nothing about our driving habits could possibly burn through that much fuel.
Also totally agree with this, no freaking way the math can work out in a way that my 4-cylinder Honda is responsible for $380 a month in gas. I barely drive 20 miles a day. I'm in Arizona btw.
Anyone else get absolutely crushed at the pump this month? The 2026 gas prices are brutal.
I have heard that the problem is that the oil companies are increasing refinery margins and blending costs to protect their quarterly profits, and so those costs get passed down to consumers as higher prices per gallon.