Do others notice the economy of “economical” cars scales much more strongly with driving style; i.e., how economically you drive has more impact on the real mpg in a car considered to be an economical car??
On a sedate ~60mph run my mum can get 75mpg in her 1.0L Toyota Aygo, she recently rushed my brother to the airport in it, not driving like a lunatic, just 75-80mph, and the economy went to ~45 ... so 40% less
On the motorway I tend to potter at 65mph in my 2.0L Mini, I get about 43mpg. I found myself having to get to hospital recently, again not rally driving, just a smooth 75-80 on the motorway, and the economy for the journey was 35 so I lost less than 20%
I have lots of examples but that’s just an idea… maybe I’m just asking the obvious. The Top Gear episode comes to mind where the Stig drives a Prius as fast as he can and Clarkson has to just keep up in a BMW M3; and the BMW gets better economy as it’s not working flat out