environmental facts
            FEDERAL RATINGS OF FUEL  ECONOMY FOR 1975 CARS


         To meet the requirements of the Clean Air Act, the U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency  must test new cars to cer-
     tify that they meet air pollution requirements.  In mak-
     ing these tests, EPA obtains data which can be used to
     calculate the fuel economy of cars under representative
     driving conditions.

         For the 1975 model year, EPA has compiled fuel
     economy figures for all automobiles that were certified by
     EPA as of September 15, 1974. These figures are being
     published jointly by EPA and the Federal Energy Administra-
     tion in a booklet, "1975 Gas Mileage Guide for New Car
     Buyers," free on request from the General Services Adminis-
     tration's Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, Colorado
     81009.  A second edition early in 1975 will include fuel
     economy data on cars and light-duty trucks yet to be cer-
     tified.

         Moreover, automakers are voluntarily putting EPA-FEA
     labels on all their 1975 models  to show prospective buyers
     the results of the EPA tests.

         The fuel economy rating and labeling program of the
     two agencies is designed to encourage energy conservation
     in the use of automobiles by:

         *  Helping the public understand what aspects of
            car design and equipment tend to reduce fuel
            consumption,

         *  Influencing manufacturers to make vehicles that
            have better fuel economy, and

         *  Influencing the public to buy vehicles that have
            better fuel economy.

     The Gas Mileage Guide;

         The principal mileage guide covers passenger cars
     offered for sale in the United States.  Cars intended for
     sale in California are listed in a separate guide, because
     California's exhaust emission standards are different from


UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY • WASHINGTON, B.C. 20460

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the Federal standards that apply elsewhere.  California
cars are certified separately.

     The 1975 guide has several features that are designed
to make the information more useful and meaningful
to the car buyer:

     *  1975 models are rated for two types of use:  city
        driving and highway driving.  Cars normally get
        more miles per gallon of fuel at steady-speed
        highway driving than in slower, stop-and-go city
        driving.  This distinction can be useful to the
        buyer who knows how much of each type of driv-
        ing he does.

     *  Each model is listed only once—miles-per-gallon
        data are sales weighted.

     *  The ratings are arranged alphabetically by manu-
        facturer, and by  "car line"—the maker's name
        for cars with common characteristics of chassis
        and body construction.  (For example, Nova, Torino,
        and Gremlin are car lines for Chevrolet, Ford, and
        American Motors cars.)

     When more than one engine size and fuel system are
available in a car line,  separate fuel economy figures are
given for each.  If the car is equipped with a catalytic
converter, that fact is noted.  Station wagons are listed
separately, but no distinctions are made for other body
styles, number of doors,  trim options, etc.

The Labeling Program

     Most automakers have agreed to label each new car
with the miles-per-gallon information supplied by EPA for
that model.  The label will be attached to a rear window,
like the price sticker.   The maker has a choice of label
types:  one giving an average rating for that car line and
engine; one giving a range as well as the estimated average;
one listing all figures for a car line, with that model under-
lined or circled; and one specifying the fuel economy results
of the cars tested with the same transmission, axle ratio,
and weight, as well as the same engine and fuel system.
Because of these options  the data presented on the label
will not always be identical with the data in the mileage
guide which gives only an average rating for each car line
and engine series.

How the Tests are Conducted
     EPA tests cars for exhaust emissions and fuel economy
at its laboratory in Ann  Arbor, Michigan.  Each car is driven
on a dynamometer, a machine that permits a typical driving
cycle in the laboratory.  Vehicle loads, starts and stops,
speeds and distances can  be simulated accurately, while
data on fuel burned and emissions produced are recorded.

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Each vehicle is tested under exactly the same conditions, some-
thing impossible to achieve with road testing.

     The city-driving test cycle simulates the conditions
encountered when a typical driver commutes from home to work
and back.  Average speed is 20 miles per hour, with many starts
and stops.  The test takes 28 minutes.

     The highway driving test, performed only for fuel economy
measurement, simulates driving on interstate highways and rural
roads.  Average speed is 49 miles per hour.  The test takes 12
minutes.

     Fuel economy figures for city and highway driving are
computed from the dynamometer tests.  To determine compliance
with anti-pollution requirements, it is not necessary to test
every possible engine-fuel system-weight combination.  Therefore,
to calculate the sales weighted fuel economy, by weight, of
each engine-fuel system combination in each car line, EPA
has used some additional data supplied by the automakers on
different weight vehicles in some engine-fuel system combi-
nations that were missing from its own measurements of emission-
test vehicles.  In addition, manufacturers have supplied
fuel economy data applicable to vehicles of a certain engine,
fuel system, catalyst, axle ratio, and transmission.

     When such maker-supplied data have been used, the Agency
requires that Federal testing procedures be followed and
detailed engineering reports made.  Some have been accepted
and used to expand the fuel economy information to more
varieties of car lines, engines, and equipment.  Some have
been rejected.  And in some cases EPA has performed its own
tests to confirm the manufacturers' results.

What the Tests Mean to_the New Car Buyer

     An EPA fuel economy figure is not a guarantee of fuel
economy on a given car.  They are estimates, the best estimates
that can be made from careful laboratory testing and stat-
istical analysis.

      The mileage  guide  figures  tell  the  new  car buyer  the
 relative  fuel  economy  for  most  of  the  choices  available  to
 him as  the  make,  model,  engine,  and  fuel system.

      But  the  actual  fuel economy  an  individual car owner
 will  experience will  depend on  the  type  of driving he  does,
 and,  of  course,  the mileage guide  figures  cannot  indicate  the
 fuel-economy  costs  of bad driving  habits and lax  maintenance.
 A heavy  foot  on  the gas  and the brake,  frequent starts  and
 stops,  long periods of  idling,  and driving at uneven speeds
 all mean  fewer miles  to the gallon.   And no  car will achieve
 its best  gas  mileage  unless it  is  well maintained and  kept
 in good  condition.
                                                    September 1974

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OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS (A-107)
U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460
           POSTAGE AND FEES PAID
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                        EPA-335
           THIRD CLASS BULK RATE

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