Better Fuel Mileage ??
Before you start buying things for mileage you may want to figure out how much you will really save. For example if I had to drive 80 miles per day I would drive it 70 mph and most likely get 17 mpg. That would take me 1.14 hours round trip and consume 23.53 gallons per week say gas is $3.5 per gallon, I would spend $82.35 per week. Now if I drove 55 mph and got 19 mpg I would save $8.68 per week and going slower would spend almost 2 hours in the truck per week. For me it would not be worth it but may be important for you. Assuming you would drive 50 weeks per year you would end up saving about $434 a year going slower. Probably some add on stuff may give you 1-2 mpg better, just figure when it will pay for itself in fuel. Just my $0.02
I drive 80 miles a day commuting plus weekend errands. Average about 1800 miles per month. About 35% city driving, 65% highway with cruise at 65 mph. Average 17.0 mpg. I spend about $400 per month on fuel. Truck engine/trans/chassis is completely stock except for the K&N air filter.
The one observation I will make about the air filter is the amount smoke when the truck is run 1/2 to full throttle. Lots of black smoke with a paper air filter and almost none with the K&N filter. Black smoke equals wasted fuel. So...
Looks like you have it under control. I do not have any information on fuel saving accessories other than a larger exhaust but that's expensive and would be more noisy. I have read where some guys were buying the front axle lockout but that runs $2000 or so. They claim to get 2 mpg better but it will take 80k miles to break even with the fuel savings. Good luck on your quest, 80 miles a day driving, yuck
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Before you start buying things for mileage you may want to figure out how much you will really save. For example if I had to drive 80 miles per day I would drive it 70 mph and most likely get 17 mpg. That would take me 1.14 hours round trip and consume 23.53 gallons per week say gas is $3.5 per gallon, I would spend $82.35 per week. Now if I drove 55 mph and got 19 mpg I would save $8.68 per week and going slower would spend almost 2 hours in the truck per week. For me it would not be worth it but may be important for you. Assuming you would drive 50 weeks per year you would end up saving about $434 a year going slower. Probably some add on stuff may give you 1-2 mpg better, just figure when it will pay for itself in fuel. Just my $0.02
I wonder if adding somewhat larger diameter tires would help. Nothing extreme as that would increase rolling resistance. This would lower the rpm some but would the larger tires, increased wind resistance lower fuel mileage or cancel each other out?
OUCH. That's why mine is still stock. That and I have two sets of tires and rims. One set for winter; The other for, well, the other seasons. I like my money more than a fancy truck that I'll just have to sell some day anyway.
My current thought is that Myth Busters was correct when they tested the short bed. But I expect to see different results if they ever test the long bed.
I am going to run tail gate down for two weeks (approx. 800-900 miles) and post whatever results I get.
PSM is a cold air kit to add to the stock air box.
http://www.psmdiesel.com/air_04.5.php
TAG is a Turbo Air Guide and is supposed to smooth out the air going into the turbo. I have ordered the PSM to try on my truck as the articles in TDR sounded very credible in the testing they did. It just made sense. I have no experience or comments regarding the TAG devices.
http://www.psmdiesel.com/air_04.5.php
TAG is a Turbo Air Guide and is supposed to smooth out the air going into the turbo. I have ordered the PSM to try on my truck as the articles in TDR sounded very credible in the testing they did. It just made sense. I have no experience or comments regarding the TAG devices.
Thats funny right there, if I drive 55 on a two lane highway everyone drafts me, just long enough for the next car to pass...
I am calling that test busted.
Grant is one of the Ghost Hunters there tree farm. Only way to know...two tanks of fuel, paper and pencil. Also, make sure that the outside temperature is constant during this test and the road is absolutely level and there is no head or tail wind and you drive exactly the same, not passing anyone, and don't forget the egg under the accelerator and, and...... Yeah. Wind tunnel would be easier.


