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How many miles per gallon does a motor coach bus get?

Motorcoaches move people with little fuel. The average fuel efficiency of a motorcoach is 6.1 miles per gallon of fuel. With this fuel efficiency, a motorcoach carrying the industry average of 36 passengers achieved 240 passenger miles per gallon of fuel.



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An all diesel coach bus averages 2.5 mile to the gallon Metro Style Buses closer to 3.5mpg. A full size bus holds about 250 gallons of fuel. This make the range about 625 to 750mpg depending on the style of bus. The longest range electric bus made by Proterra was driven 1,101 miles on one charge.

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The average performance of a 15 passenger gasoline-powered shuttle bus or minibus for sale is between 7 and 12 miles per gallon. The best way to find out the approximate number is to discuss your vehicle use pattern and schedule with a knowledgeable bus dealer.

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Which mode of transportation is best for the earth? Actually, the bus -- specifically, city-to-city buses like the Greyhound. The bus itself gets a paltry 6 miles per gallon. The reason buses are environmentally sound is that they are usually full of people, giving it the highest miles per gallon per passenger, at 208.

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The average bus gets between 6 and 9 mpg, depending on many factors (size of bus, wind, speed, and of course how heavily loaded). That being said, it's not usually gas mileage. The majority of buses have diesel engines. Some run on propane, and a few on gasoline, but mostly diesel.

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Diesel school buses are already the most fuel-efficient in the industry, due to a higher BTU count compared to other fuels, providing better fuel economy and a longer operating range compared to similar-sized gasoline, propane or compressed natural gas (CNG) engines.

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Diesel school buses are already the most fuel-efficient in the industry, due to a higher BTU count compared to other fuels, providing better fuel economy and a longer operating range compared to similar-sized gasoline, propane or compressed natural gas (CNG) engines.

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On average, a clean-diesel school bus can travel about 510 miles on a tank of diesel vs. only 270 miles on gasoline, based on the same standard-sized fuel tanks. Newer engines, like the Detroit™ DD5™ and DD8™ diesel engines, show an additional three percent increase in fuel efficiency.

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Executive buses average 6 miles per gallon, especially when it comes to larger models that carry 45 to 51 passengers. Newer, high-tech models may get up to 10 to 12 miles per gallon.

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Diesel powers over 90% of all school buses thanks to its combination of fuel safety, energy efficiency, reliability, durability, established fueling and maintenance network, range and operational flexibility, secondary markets and low acquisition and operating costs.

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Period. Why? Diesel is the most fuel-efficient engine type on the market. Diesel outperforms other fuels in operating range.

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Diesel. Among other types of fuel transport vehicles use, diesel fuel is a popular choice for those working with larger-capacity vehicles such as buses, vans, trucks, and boats.

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A diesel engine requires less fuel to produce the same output as a gas engine. A conventional gas engine operates via a spark ignition system, which burns more fuel than a diesel engine's combustion system. As a result, diesel buses are more fuel-efficient per gallon and burn less fuel while idling.

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Ultimately, the general consensus may be that the flat-nose transit buses make the best conversions. A flat-nose (transit) school bus could have the engine in the front or the rear (pusher). But, there are front-engine flat-nose transit buses and rear-engine flat-nose transit buses.

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Type 'A' buses on the Ford chassis with the 460 gas V-8 got 5-9 MPG with the honest average closer to 5 MPG than to 9 MPG. The Type 'A' buses on the Chevy/GMC chassis with the 6.2L diesel V-8 were underpowered, slow, noisy, and not very fuel efficient. 10-14 MPG. The engines were pretty stout but underpowered in a bus.

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Availability was much higher during the last 8 months with an average availability of 84.7%. The battery buses had an overall average efficiency of 2.84 kWh per mile, which equates to a fuel economy of 13.3 miles per diesel gallon equivalent (mpdge).

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According to the Alternative Fuels Data Center, school buses get an average fuel economy of just 6.02 miles per gallon (MPG).

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