ErikSS wrote:I got 10.38 mpg. Mostly highway and mostly around 68 mph.
HARDTRAILZ wrote:90 miles of 80+ mph showed 15.8 average. 90 miles of 60 mph showed 17.4 mpg. Both today and numbers via scanguage II. Last hand calculation was over 28 gallons and showed about 15.75 in mixed driving.
jhmeg2 wrote:With the 3" suspension and 3" body lift stock tires and 3.42s pulling a 1200 lbs trailer with a 6000 lbs tundra on it from south Ohio to middle Wisconsin. .. about 16. With no trailer and 35s... about 10-13. But now I totaled the tundra and put in another rear end (same gear ratio). New plugs, oil change, air filter, and fuel filter, no big improvement. Maybe I need an O2 sensor? But I didn't get a code.
BowTide wrote:[b]from my limited calculations in the first few tanks (city driving 55 and under) 12.8-14 is best I can get, isn't that a little low for a 6 banger? Oh, it has 3.42 gears and stock 245 16's in a 'Fordstone' Destination street tire. /b]
Shdwdrgn wrote:BowTide wrote:[b]from my limited calculations in the first few tanks (city driving 55 and under) 12.8-14 is best I can get, isn't that a little low for a 6 banger? Oh, it has 3.42 gears and stock 245 16's in a 'Fordstone' Destination street tire. /b]
You would have to answer a lot more questions before anyone could give you a reasonable answer. What year is your vehicle? Have many miles? How well has it been maintained (regular oil changes, etc)? When was the last time you cleaned the throttle body? Is your drive a constant stop&go, or do you do a lot of low-speed cruising? How aggressively do you drive? Do you have any extra weight in the vehicle? Towing a load? 2WD or 4WD?
As you can see, there is quite a list of things that can affect your mileage. Yes your numbers are on the low end, but if you've done something like going 50,000 miles between oil changes or strapped a sheet of plywood to your grill, then obviously your mileage would be lower than average.