Why Real-World Fuel Efficiency Numbers Don't Match up to Lab Tests
Real-life fuel consumption reduction numbers never live up to the numbers some tire makers tout when promoting fuel efficiency. One reason is that tire makers conduct their testing and evaluation under ideal conditions on test tracks to control as many variables as possible
Real-life fuel consumption reduction numbers never live up to the numbers some tire makers tout when promoting fuel efficiency. One reason is that tire makers conduct their testing and evaluation under ideal conditions on test tracks to control as many variables as possible.
According to Bridgestone, drivers, loads, trucks, trailers and test courses remain constant throughout a single test.
"If it's too windy, or too hot or too cold, or if it rains or snows, the day's testing is canceled," says Guy Walenga. "In the real world, you don't have the luxury of controlling everything, so the numbers are going to be different."
Michelin's Don Baldwin adds that driver habits, truck aerodynamics, tire pressure and engine maintenance are also significant factors in real-world fuel economy.
"A tire with higher rolling resistance will take more energy to move down the road. Choosing tires with lower rolling resistance and maintaining the pressure in those tires will save fuel," he says. "The percentage of the total will depend on how the other factors are controlled. We have calculators that will predict the effect of the tires based on rolling resistance, including how rolling resistance evolves over the life of the tire. This effect is always taking place, even if it is difficult to see because other factors are not being controlled."
Another reason the numbers don't always add up is apples-to-oranges comparisons. A half-worn, non-fuel-efficient tire may actually be almost as fuel-efficient as a brand-new low-rolling-resistance tire. Tires are at their least efficient when the tread is new and deep. As tread wears away, the rolling resistance improves. While one might be tempted to run, say, a three-month comparison between in-service tires and new fuel-efficient tires, the results might not do justice to the fuel-efficient tire.
The best way to evaluate fuel-efficient tires is over their life cycle - including acquisition cost and casing credit, miles-per-thousandth of tire life, and fuel consumption improvements between the baseline vehicle and the test vehicle, Bridgestone advises.
"Bearing in mind that not all SmartWay-approved tires will yield the same performance, you will save more money on fuel with a low-rolling-resistance tire than you will give up in tire life," says Goodyear's Larry Tucker. "When we did those calculations, fuel was still at $2 a gallon."
From the June 2011 Issue of Heavy Duty Trucking
More Fleet Management

AUCTION OF EQUITY INTEREST IN HEAVY HAUL TRUCKING COMPANY!!
Mark your calendar: June 30, 2026 (10:00 a.m. PDT). MagnaTrans, LLC, a California limited liability company doing business as Magna Transportation Group is going to auction! Bid on a 37.5% ownership interest in this Rancho Cucamonga-based heavy haul and over-dimensional trucking company operating across California, Oregon, and Arizona. The equity interest will be sold to the highest bidder or bidders under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code at 10:00 a.m. PDT.
Read More →
Volvo Trucks Adds Unattended Over-the-Air Software Update Capabilities
The latest evolution of Volvo’s over-the-air update technology allows software updates to run while trucks are parked, helping fleets keep vehicles current without disrupting operations.
Read More →How Waste Connections is Using Data, Telematics, and AI
How do you manage and maintain more than 18,000 connected trucks? Data. Lots of it.
Read More →
Why Fleet Data Matters More Than Ever at Waste Connections [Watch]
Waste Connections' Chuck Palmer explains how telematics, predictive maintenance, safety analytics, and AI help keep vehicles on the road and drivers safe in this episode of HDT Talks Trucking.
Read More →
NMFTA Launches Free, Anonymous Cybersecurity Threat Report Portal
Organizations are encouraged to anonymously report freight fraud, cargo crime, and cyber threats while gaining visibility into incidents reported across the transportation sector.
Read More →
AI Can Optimize a Fleet. Can It Replace Human Judgment?
Fleets fear falling behind if they don’t adopt AI quickly enough. They also fear what happens if the technology makes the wrong decision.
Read More →
Jamie Hagen Gets Real About Running a Small Fleet in an Uncertain Economy
Small fleet owner Jamie Hagen says new legal risks, volatile fuel prices, and a changing freight market are forcing small carriers to rethink how they operate — and what they can afford.
Read More →Jamie Hagen Gets Real About Freight, Fuel Prices, Safety, and Small-Fleet Survival
Running a small trucking fleet right now isn’t easy, especially right now. And Jamie Hagen doesn’t sugarcoat it.
Read More →Jamie Hagen Gets Real About Freight, Fuel Prices, Safety, and Small-Fleet Survival
Running a small trucking fleet right now isn’t easy, especially right now. And Jamie Hagen doesn’t sugarcoat it.
Read More →
Data Lock‑In or Integration Lock‑Out?
Data fragmentation is costing dealerships, OEMs, fleets, and upfitters millions. Here’s why interoperability may be the fix the trucking industry needs.
Read More →

