Reduce Fuel Use & Idling
Reduce Fuel Waste with GPS Tracking
Idling, speeding, rapid acceleration—so many ways careless driving can drive up your costs and increase wear and tear on your vehicles. GPSNavis can help.
Reduce fuel costs up to 20%
Wasting fuel is a drag on your company’s profits. Every time your drivers leave an engine running while making a delivery or eating lunch costs you extra money. Every time they speed to a job or rapidly accelerate, that’s costing you money.
GPSNavis idling, speeding, and rapid acceleration alerts help fleet managers spot problems and coach drivers to increase the bottom line. In fact one customer even found that tracking speeding eliminated the need for his trucks to refuel during a shift.
Reduce idling to stop wasting fuel
Idling is harmful to the environment, the vehicle, and your company’s bottom line:
- Larger vehicles waste even more fuel idling than passenger cars.
- Idling for just 30 seconds uses more fuel than restarting an engine.
- Idling leaves fuel residues that damage engine components and cause higher maintenance costs over time.
- Idling is only fuel efficient for 7 seconds. Any longer and drivers should shut off a car.
Customized alerts help curb idling behavior
The Idle Activity Report lets you review data on each vehicle such as:
- Total idle time
- Average idle duration
- Total idle alerts when a vehicle or asset idles for an extended period of time
- A ranking of your worst idle offenders
- Set a custom threshold for idle time, and get notified every time that threshold is passed. By monitoring and reducing inefficient driving, you save time and money.
Reduce idling to stop wasting fuel
Idling is harmful to the environment, the vehicle, and your company’s bottom line:
- Larger vehicles waste even more fuel idling than passenger cars.
- Idling for just 30 seconds uses more fuel than restarting an engine.
- Idling leaves fuel residues that damage engine components and cause higher maintenance costs over time.
- Idling is only fuel efficient for 7 seconds. Any longer and drivers should shut off a car.