I have now done 40,000 miles in my W212 E220 Auto. One thing I have noticed is that is has a huge variation in MPG according to outside air temperature. All my journeys are long, so this is not to do with the extended warm up time - the journey MPG settles down after about 50 miles and the figure it settles down at is proportional to the temperature.
Anyway, I thought I would plot some graphs, to make sense of this.
Here is the MPG (all measured at the pump, not on the on-board computer) for each tankfull:
I got the car in Oct 09, and you can clearly see the winter dip at the end of 2010.
So, I decided to plot MPG against date, and add the monthly mean temperatures from the met office:
The blue temperature line clearly follows the red MPG line, and you can see that the car does around 55 MPG when the temperature is above around 12C, and drops down to about 48 MPG in winter.
Furthermore, at the left hand side of the graph, the red and blue lines do not match (as the engine is new), until the engine is run in (when they join). So this answers the question "how long does it take to run in a diesel" - for my car it was about 5,000 miles.
Thought this may be of interest to someone...
Anyway, I thought I would plot some graphs, to make sense of this.
Here is the MPG (all measured at the pump, not on the on-board computer) for each tankfull:

I got the car in Oct 09, and you can clearly see the winter dip at the end of 2010.
So, I decided to plot MPG against date, and add the monthly mean temperatures from the met office:

The blue temperature line clearly follows the red MPG line, and you can see that the car does around 55 MPG when the temperature is above around 12C, and drops down to about 48 MPG in winter.
Furthermore, at the left hand side of the graph, the red and blue lines do not match (as the engine is new), until the engine is run in (when they join). So this answers the question "how long does it take to run in a diesel" - for my car it was about 5,000 miles.
Thought this may be of interest to someone...