When I first started driving most cars were 4 speed and N/A petrol. The ones I could afford to insure were 1600cc max. They cruised at about 4000 rpm at 70mph.
Then they introduced 5 speed boxes. The engines changed sod all. Adding a 5th gear brought the revs down to about 3500 at 70 mph but seemed to make no difference to the mpg, stayed at about 33 at best. Lets call it progress but nothing to get too excited about.
Then we got fuel injection. Still 5 speed but more power but the revs at 70mph stayed the same as did economy. There was an upside though, the cars being more powerful and faster. Progress was finally reaching mass market cars.
Then everything started to get heavier and slower.
So we went to diesel, Golf TDi 90 PS. 2400 rpm at 70 mph in 5th, decent performance and high 40's mpg overall.
Move on 12 years and we buy a BMW 118D. 142PS, 1800 rpm at 70 in 6th. performance was excellent and mpg about the same as the Golf, that was progess especially when there was no smoke thanks to the DPF.
Now of course we drive a Skoda Superb TSI 1.4 150 PS and a Fabia TSi 1.0 110 PS. The Fabia is doing 2200 rpm at 70 mph in 6th and the Superb 2300 rpm at 70 in 6th. Both have excellent performance, 10 years ago I would not have dreamed of driving 1.4 and 1.0 petrols even with a turbo.
My first car was a 1 litre Anglia. It had about 40 bhp, did about 4400 rpm at 70 mph (based on gearing and tyres size - no rev counter) and did about 30 mpg. Compare that to the 1.0 TSi Fabia above. But its taken from 1964 to 2018 to achieve that. Where will we be in 54 years time?
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