AuthorTopic: GAS IS IT WORTH IT?  (Read 744 times)

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Offline peasey

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« on: August 20, 2007, 16:46:56 »
What mpg would i get if i was to get my 3.9 discovery converted to gas?are there any hidden pitfalls and probs i should know about. could i install it myself? what would it cost me to get it installed by a pro?and is it all worth it?
HIT IT AND HIT IT HARD

Offline Range Rover Blues

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2007, 16:57:41 »
My multipoint sytem was £1250 with an upright torriodal tank in place of the spare, it's the most expensive tank BTW.  I fitted it myself, the hardest parts being the tank/piping and removing the inlet manifold to fit the nozzles.  I get about 12mpg being careful now that I've binned the cats and fitted a sports pipe.  I get 9.5 towing about 2 tonnes of caravan.  My LSE has a 5.0 V8 BTW.

Blue has a crappy old draw throughg system and is currently doing about 240 miles to £32, havn't worked out any figures yet but that system is less powerfull than petrol though it's more economical.  the mixer reduces the engine's ability to breath so the car is less powerful on petrol too and the draw-through sytem runs a bit lean on LPG.

My advice would be Multipoint if the car is worth the money and a cheapish single point (with lambda feedback) if it isn't.  You can still buy draw-through systems (and fit an economiser to regulate the richness) but these rely on a restrcition in the airflow to work properly, sulk with a snorkel fitted and are harder to set up (single and multipoints are set up with a PC).
Blue,  1988  Range Rover 3.5 EFi with plenty of toys bolted on
Chuggaboom, 1995 Range Rover Classic
1995 Range Rover Classic Vogue LSE with 5 big sticks of Blackpool rock under the bonnet.

Offline SteveGoodz

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« Reply #2 on: August 20, 2007, 23:03:38 »
My previous Discovery was a 3.9V8 and I had that converted to LPG ~ best thing I ever did. Cost was a straight £1000 for a single point system with Lambda feedback. You need to figure out how long it will take you to recover the initial outlay based on your mileage. Mine paid for itself very quickly, but I was doing almost 1000 miles per week!

I had the original petrol tank removed and two 40litre gas tanks fitted in the same space. Then we installed a small (20-odd litre) petrol tank in the back wing to give some patrol for starting/emergencies.

Once the system had been tuned properly the engine ran better (i.e. smoother) on LPG than petrol without a notable drop in mpg. 16 vs 18 mpg, if I remember correctly. The saving with LPG is not in improved mileage but reduced fuel costs.

You can certainly do it yourself but your insurance company may want you to get it checked over and certified by a registered installer.
Regards

Steve G
"Paddy" a 1996 3.9 V8 ES Auto Discovery
A re-imported Japanese model running on LPG

Offline Rossko

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« Reply #3 on: August 20, 2007, 23:05:16 »
For a loose rule-of-thumb, you won't save the installation cost of a good pro job until you've done 20-25,000 miles on LPG. After that comes the half-price costs.

That shocks a lot of folks  :)   Do the sums and see if it works for you. Roughly, LPG cost per mile 50-60% of petrol.  You can shorten the payback time by investing your own effort in a DIY job.

Tanks are always a compromise, you must choose whether you want to keep the loadspace, dicky seats, fullsize petrol tank, or ground clearance; there are choices for a Disco. However not all the options would be sensible for driveway mechanics. Expect around 200 miles range for most tank fittings.

If it runs rough'n'smokey on petrol it will NOT run better on gas. Which is a way of saying high mileage cars can be disappointing on LPG, but against that I've converted lots of 100,000+ cars with good results. And turned just a few sow's ears away. Sometimes the people seeking to reduce fuel costs are already scrimping on maintenance, which isn't a happy combination. LPG is more demanding of ignition systems and general engine condition.

Whether to use the simplistic, cheaper venturi systems on a 3.9 or the higher performance, higher cost injection systems is your choice. As with most things, you get what you pay for. The simpler system is more likely to have issues with pre-existing wear and tear on the car. We fitted lots in the past (a) they were all that were available once! (b) chances of success were better on low-miles engine. Many of those older systems soldier on quite happily. But now we'd only install injection on RR classic/Disco, simply because it won't come back on us.  If the customer wants a really cheap job we point them at eBay and wish them luck.

As an aside, it's a hiding to nothing attempting to fit a venturi system to later 4.0/4.6s, the only sensible way is with injection for those.

CAUTION blatent plug http://www.blazegas.com/kits.html

good luck, Ross K
GLASS

Offline Wireless

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« Reply #4 on: August 21, 2007, 00:09:57 »
Mine's a '96 3.9 injection, I had the older venturi system, a Landi system, fitted in March 1999, just had to replace the vapouriser for an OMV unit in July this year, so not bad service.

I average 17 mpg on LPG, and 18 mpg on petrol, although on a run to Scotland I had a 19 mpg average on LPG up the motorway.

I'd hope that power delivery must be higher for injected LPG systems when under heavy load or towing, since that is the only area on LPG where power delivery and fuel consumption suffers using a venturi system.

As a matter of interest, not that I'm desperate to change things after 8 years on an old car, but what would the cost be to upgrade to an injected system from the venturi system I'm on now?

Offline jjsaul

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« Reply #5 on: August 21, 2007, 12:25:13 »
been running single point on a 3.5 EFi for 2 years now and the cost saving is great (done about 40,000 miles now)...
just bought a multipoint kit for my 4.6 (single point systems aren't suitable for the 4.2 / 4.6's) and havent got round to fitting it yet and im kicking myself every time i have to put £70 petrol in to fill it up  :shock:
James

...lovin dirty days out...

1983 OneTen V8 Station Wagon 3.5 (LPG)
1972 Range Rover V8
1992 Range Rover 4.6 (LPG)
1978 Range Rover Carmichael Commando 6x4
1972 Range Rover - Major project, FOR SALE
1976 Range Rover - Less of a project, FOR SALE
Previously: Range Rovers 1988, 1990 and others...
2005 Volvo V70 T5 SE (LPG) - daily driver


Offline Range Rover Blues

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« Reply #6 on: August 21, 2007, 17:14:50 »
How much was your system again Jamie, IIRC it was under a grand for the whole front end (just add tank) which for the quality kit was not a bad price.

For those that don't know Jamie and I bought our kits form the same guy, though his is newer than mine and things move fast in the LPG industry.

As a rule though I recon LPG costs about half as much as petrol, LPG is between 43 and 47p/litre compared to 93ish for petrol, but you do use more fuel.

I worry about miles/£ rather than MPG, so if I recon my system cost £1250 all in then after about the same again in LPG I'm breaking even.

But wait, my oil lasts longer, my engine will last longer and I can now park in Sheffield FREE because my car is environmentally friendly dual-fuel.  There are some benefits beyond your pocket.
Blue,  1988  Range Rover 3.5 EFi with plenty of toys bolted on
Chuggaboom, 1995 Range Rover Classic
1995 Range Rover Classic Vogue LSE with 5 big sticks of Blackpool rock under the bonnet.

Offline Ja1983

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« Reply #7 on: August 21, 2007, 23:02:44 »
another point worth considering is the changing rice of fuel...

any green haired hooligan will tel you that theree aint much gas/oil left, and you know what that will do to the price of gas and petrol in the next few years...

although i adore the sound of a v8 at full chat, the best option for saving a few quid would probably to switch to a derv.

It has been said that, given enough time, a million monkeys bashing at a million typewriters would eventually produce the complete works of Shakespeare. Thanks to the Saxo forums, we now know this to be wrong

No oil leek = No oil left!

Offline Range Rover Blues

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« Reply #8 on: August 25, 2007, 13:23:06 »
But LPG is a by-product of refining petrol, deisel and av-gas.  So whilst there are fuel reserves then the staus quo will remain,

Diesels can run on SVO, Petrols on alcohol, well LPG system can run on CNG or compressed natural gas (Methane) and my system is already capable of running on it, I just have to change one setting with the laptop and check the callibration.
Blue,  1988  Range Rover 3.5 EFi with plenty of toys bolted on
Chuggaboom, 1995 Range Rover Classic
1995 Range Rover Classic Vogue LSE with 5 big sticks of Blackpool rock under the bonnet.

Offline Wireless

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GAS IS IT WORTH IT?
« Reply #9 on: August 25, 2007, 16:00:35 »
Quote from: "Range Rover Blues"
...well LPG system can run on CNG or compressed natural gas (Methane) and my system is already capable of running on it, I just have to change one setting with the laptop and check the callibration.


Of course, the other consideration is the complex web strapping of a cow to the vehicle roof, and running the fuel pipe from the cow's backside to the LPG system...

Offline JumboBeef

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« Reply #10 on: August 29, 2007, 19:38:09 »
I love LPG.  Dead smug filling up and maxing out at about £26!  Half the cost to run, no loss in power, cheaper to run than a diesel and of course:

It's a V8 mate!

Never had a problem with insurance.  As long as it has past an MOT with the system fitted, that's OK for them.
1991 Range Rover Vogue SE V8 auto on LPG, time warp!

Offline Range Rover Blues

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« Reply #11 on: August 30, 2007, 01:10:36 »
Quote from: "Wireless"
Quote from: "Range Rover Blues"
...well LPG system can run on CNG or compressed natural gas (Methane) and my system is already capable of running on it, I just have to change one setting with the laptop and check the callibration.


Of course, the other consideration is the complex web strapping of a cow to the vehicle roof, and running the fuel pipe from the cow's backside to the LPG system...


LMAO, if only I could run a car on farts :lol:
Blue,  1988  Range Rover 3.5 EFi with plenty of toys bolted on
Chuggaboom, 1995 Range Rover Classic
1995 Range Rover Classic Vogue LSE with 5 big sticks of Blackpool rock under the bonnet.

 






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