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High gas prices? 14 ways to save money on fuel.

Paying too much for gas? Hamm offers fourteen pieces of advice that will help you save on the fuel costs of your commute. These tactics will improve either the efficiency of fuel consumption on your commute or will reduce the number of miles you put on your car.

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Damian Dovarganes/AP/File
Drivers fill up with discounted gasoline at a Costco gas station in Van Nuys, Calif.

Whenever I see advice on saving money on commuting fuel costs, the suggestions often revolve around completely giving up your car.

I鈥檓 as guilty of that as anyone else. It鈥檚 a聽great聽way to drastically trim your finances.

Let鈥檚 be honest, though: a lot of people simply aren鈥檛 going to give up their car. They have too much emotionally tied into the freedom of having an automobile to take them wherever and whenever they want.

So, with that in mind, here are fourteen pieces of advice that will each help you save on the fuel costs of your commute. Every single one of these tactics will improve either the efficiency of fuel consumption on your commute or will reduce the number of miles you put on your car.聽

1. Air up your tires to the maximum recommended pressure each month.
Tire air pressure is measured in psi. For every psi below the maximum recommended pressure that any one of your tires falls, you鈥檙e losing 0.125% of your fuel efficiency. So, if all of your tires are 8 psi low, you鈥檙e losing 4% efficiency聽just because of air. Your 25 mpg car becomes a 24 mpg car just because you haven鈥檛 aired up the tires lately. Since airing up your tires is free at many gas stations and it only takes a few minutes, you should take the time once a month or so to air your tires up.

2. If at all possible, telecommute.
If you work at a job that allows you to work from home, even if it鈥檚 one day a week or one day a month, take advantage of that time. Every single day that you don鈥檛 have to commute to work is savings in your pocket.

3. Minimize every little bit of accelerating and brake usage.
Every time you accelerate your car, your engine starts burning more fuel, and the harder you accelerate, the more fuel you burn. Every time you touch your brake, you鈥檙e compensating for too much acceleration earlier onor聽you鈥檙e ensuring that you鈥檙e going to have to accelerate聽more聽soon, which takes you back to more acceleration. Instead, accelerate slowly out of stops and break as little as possible.

4. Familiarize yourself with gas prices along your route.
Which gas station along your route consistently has the lowest prices? Watch the stations along your route and continually compare them. Often, you鈥檒l find that a station or two tends to have lower prices than others along your commute. Frequent those stations.

5. Use a credit card tied to the gas chain with the lowest prices.
If you鈥檙e satisfied with one of those low-cost stations, check and see if they have a credit card tied to the chain that offers rewards for using it for refueling. Many chains offer rather impressive rewards cards. If they do, sign up for that card and use it only for fueling, paying it off at month鈥檚 end and using the rewards as often as possible.

6. Minimize your heater and air conditioning usage.
Both of these burn fuel. Simply get your car鈥檚 internal temperature to something tolerable and flip it off. If it鈥檚 hot out, roll down the windows and use air motion to bring the car鈥檚 temperature down significantly before using the air to lower it further (if you must).

7. Use fuel efficiency as one of your big factors in your next car purchase.
When you buy a car, figure out the fuel efficiency of the models you鈥檙e examining and use that as one of your major factors. It doesn鈥檛 have to be the only factor, of course, but it should provide significant impact on your purchasing decision.

8. Ask about employer programs for commuting, such as a gas allowance.
Some employers offer a stipend or a reimbursement to employees for their commute. Often, it鈥檚 a program that鈥檚 not shouted from the rooftops to current employees but was perhaps included as a perk in a collective bargaining agreement. Ask the human resources office at your workplace if such a program exists.

9. Use your commute home for reasonable errands along the route.
If you know you鈥檙e going to need some specific item when you get home, shoehorn it into your commute. That way, once you鈥檙e home, there鈥檚 no reason to waste the fuel to drive out of your residential neighborhood again. You already have the item you need. I used to find that a Post-It note stuck to my rearview mirror in the morning was a perfect reminder.

10. Get rid of any and all extra weight in your car.
If you are storing any items in your car that aren鈥檛 necessary for the trip, get them out of your car. Your fuel efficiency gets worse with every extra pound that your car is carrying. Toss anything and everything extra out of your vehicle. (Remember, of course, that safety equipment, particularly in winter, is聽not聽an extra 鈥 it鈥檚 essential.)

11. Use the cheap fuel.
Read your manual and find out what kind of fuel is recommended for your car. Most of the time, the manual suggests 87 octane fuel and, if it does, that鈥檚 what you should be using. There is very little advantage to the premium fuel 鈥 what little there is does not add up to the cost difference for a car that runs fine on 87 octane.

12. Get your oil changed regularly and use the type recommended in your car manual.
Fresh oil keeps your engine properly lubricated, minimizing the work that the parts have to do in order to provide the power needed to run your car. Old oil causes the parts to run with less efficiency. Thus, if you want to minimize your fuel use (and prolong the life of your car), get oil changes according to the manufacturer鈥檚 schedule.

13. Carpool.
Carpooling means that some days, you don鈥檛 have to even drive to work. Someone just drives you right to your door. It also means that on the days you do drive, you can use the HOV lane for more efficient driving.聽Even if you鈥檙e just giving someone a lift each day, it鈥檚 still worthwhile.聽If you have a HOV lane available to you, you can now access that lane and drive at a more reasonable pace with substantially less stop-and-go driving.

14. Replace your air filter according to your maintenance schedule.
A final tip: change your car鈥檚 air filter on a regular basis.聽聽to the fuel efficiency of your car. Change the filter according to the recommendations of the filter manufacturer.

Keep on top of these things and you鈥檒l get more miles on fewer dollars.

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