How Consumer Reports tests cars:
Fuel economy
We perform our own fuel-economy tests, independent of the government's often-quoted EPA figures and the manufacturers' claims.
Using a precise fuel-flow measuring device spliced into the fuel line, we run three separate circuits. One is on a public
highway at a steady 65 mph. That circuit is run in both directions to counteract any wind effect. A second is a stop-and-go
simulated city-driving test done at our track. The third is a 150-mile "one-day trip" using several drivers taking turns around
a 30-mile loop of public roads that include a highway section, secondary roads, and rural byways.
CR's overall fuel-economy numbers are derived from those three fuel consumption tests.