Miles per gallon thread.

Rather than edit my 1st post about our trip to Orlando for the 3 or 4th time, I'll do a new post in the thread.

I was right the 1st time about what caused the really bad mileage on one of the tanks of gas.

As a refresher, 1st tank was 12.791, 2nd tank was 12.362, 3rd tank was 11.692, 4th tank was 11.120, 5th tank was 10.841, and the 6th and final tank was 12.854.

It was the 5th tank where I was battling the 35 to 40 mph headwinds caused by the tropical storm. Sometimes the winds were so strong, they caused the truck to downshift out of overdrive.

The 4th tank included a lot of city driving in Winter Park and Orlando, FL.

So I'm more pleased about the results now than I was before.:)
 
Mileage, 1702T, Ford Ranger, V-6

My 1702T weighs about 3500 lbs. Tow with Ford Ranger, 2001, with V-6, everything standard. Average agout 45 mph and try to stay away from fast driving. Mileage is 17-18 mpg
 
volkswagon Touareg SUV 6 cyl

Towing our 27t from Reno to Oregon coast and back, over several mtn passes, we got 12 MPG, versus our normal 19 for the same trip. The VW is a great tow rig, but with a 6 cyl it is about at the limit power wise for towing a 5000 lb trailer (it is rated to tow 7700 lbs).

On a shorter trip (250 mi), we got a similar 12 MPG, again over mtn pass.

Reno
 
2012 Expedition e/l pulling 2510H

My initial pull of 200 miles with a new Expedition EL, 5.4 V8, 3.73, tow haul 6 spd auto with 18" tires averaged 12.4 on the truck mileage computer. The 200 miles was approximately 120highway and 80 miles country up and down roads through several small towns. The truck averaged 16.1 on the trip down. The trailer was empty but the truck was not.
 
Last weekend I drove 200 miles with overdrive off on interstate running about 65 with wife and dog and gear. I got 9.6 mpg. On way home I left od engaged and did not exceed 60mph. That cost me 20 minutes travel time but I averaged 13.7 mpg. I will trade the time for the gas.
 
Unfortunately, I have a heavy foot, and over the past 8 days had averaged 10-11 MPG until today, in heavy winds and brutal elevation gain, when I averaged 8 MPG. Still, in nearly 4,000 miles I have averaged a little over 60MPH. I am driving a 2002 Dodge Ram 1500 4 x 4 with the 5.9 L engine--a big V8--and towing a 1901T. I love the light weight and solid tracking, no sway, no porpoising, just reliable following.
 
I average around 15 mpg on my 97 Jeep grand cherokee 4x4 with 5.2 liter v8 which is basically identical to yours but with a smaller displacement, and my camper is 21', I guess it depends on how much stuff you carry with you, I try to take only the essentials and load as much as I can inside the jeep and have the tires inflated properly, and with the tanks empty it pulls nicely, so far I haven't been in the mountains yet, but I may do a new tune up on the jeep before I try that.
 
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I have my mileage for our first trip out to Blacksburg, VA from the Richmond, VA area, 220 miles one way.

I got a very disappointing 10.6088 mpg going out. I did drive almost the entire 220 miles in regular drive, rather than OD for most of the trip.

Pulling the trailer back home, I got 13.46098 mpg. 3 things may have contributed to that. The long climb (about 8 miles) up C'burg mountain is not in play going home. I used OD most of the trip. Finally, I was using real gasoline going home. I found a gasoline store that sells 100% gasoline, no ethanol.

This coming weekend I'll be pulling the trailer back out. This time I'll have the regular junk gasoline (10% ethanol) but will leave it in OD when possible ( most of the way). I'll see if the mpg increases any over my last trip out.
 
There are lots of factors that play into gas mileage, fuel, weather, terrain, speed, weight, road conditions, and whatever else. Over time you will come up with a better average. Be happy, you are still getting better mileage with the HiLo than you would get with a regular travel trailer.
 
I have my mileage for our first trip out to Blacksburg, VA from the Richmond, VA area, 220 miles one way.

I got a very disappointing 10.6088 mpg going out. I did drive almost the entire 220 miles in regular drive, rather than OD for most of the trip.

Pulling the trailer back home, I got 13.46098 mpg. 3 things may have contributed to that. The long climb (about 8 miles) up C'burg mountain is not in play going home. I used OD most of the trip. Finally, I was using real gasoline going home. I found a gasoline store that sells 100% gasoline, no ethanol.

This coming weekend I'll be pulling the trailer back out. This time I'll have the regular junk gasoline (10% ethanol) but will leave it in OD when possible ( most of the way). I'll see if the mpg increases any over my last trip out.

Atlee, I pull our trailer in OD as long as the transmission activity is "low". If I'm going up a long incline, I take it out of OD, and if it's really steep, I shift down to 2nd gear. I do the same thing on downhill stretches to maintain speed without using the brakes.

I pulled the trailer up a 13% grade 3 weeks ago (Cedar Breaks National Monument) - had to do that in 1st gear. :)

- Jack
 
Mileage

8300 mile Pacific Coast Highway trip from Fl Panhandle (2000 GMC Sierra 6.0L V8, auto, 119K miles, alum Cap, 2211 Trail Lite) overall average of 12.7. The truck only gets about 11.5 around town, best we've ever gotten was 13.8 on a trip with no trailer and light load.
 
2005 27T towed by three vehicles.

First is a 6cyl Volkswagon Touareg SUV. 1500 miles trip from Reno NV to Oregon, via I5 with all it's (up to) 4000k passes, averaged 11.6 mpg.

Second vehicle 2003 Ford Excursion 7.3 liter diesel with DP tuner tow and economy chip settings, same trip route, average 13.3 mpg.

Third Ford F250 7.3 liter diesel, same DP tuner, with Gear Vendor axillary transmission (gives 10%+ better mileage) route same plus 'side trip' to Seattle, 2000+miles, 14.6 mpg (we came back via a flatter route).

Also,
17T HiLo towed by Isuzu Trooper, 3.5 liter six cylinder, same basic route, about 12 mpg.

Speed kept to 65 mph. HiLo tires aired to 55 lbs.

Reno
 
MPG Thread

Eight years ago I purchased a Hypertech Micro-tuner programmer for our 2000 Ford F250 ext. cab 4x4 7.3 liter Diesel w/custom Raider Camper Shell. I had been told to set the program to the Safe Tow 2nd level setting. A friend recently told me he had set his Dodge Truck to the 3rd level improving his HP and mileage. Three weeks ago, I decided to re-program our truck to the 3rd level especially to check the performance on our planned trip to the Texas Coast.

Our HiLo was fully loaded and the camper shell carried extra supplies, tools, etc. The results were surprising. The 240 mile trip covered a combination of uphill, downhill, and finally level terrain with a couple of stops along the way. Our starting point was at 1700 feet and a gradual descent to sea level at the finish. When I pulled into the Drifters RV Park, my accumulative mpg indicator was reading 18.2 MPG. I noticed along the way my pyrometer reading which normally stayed in the 800-900 degree setting was now running at 600-700 degree reading with the average around 600. I have noticed over the years that so long as the pyrometer setting is running below 700 degrees, the mpg reading is in a gaining mode; it was even better when it was running at 500-600 degrees. I kept our speed as close to 65 as possible with rpm range at slightly below 2000.

We had to take a 240 mile round trip] immediately after getting here to attend a funeral. Without the RV hooked up, the mpg read as high as 23.5 with an overall average upon our return of 22.2 mpg. City driving [so far] is near 16mpg.

Our truck is sitting at 199K odometer reading and the old 7.3 liter engine still purrs like a kitten and runs even quieter at the 3rd tier setting. I know the later model diesels run a lot quieter with more horses but I do not think they can compare to the performance of the old 7.3 liter engines. Another plus with this setting is the extra power speeding up for passing with or w/o the RV hooked up; the engine is considerably 'peppier' with the new setting.

I am curious as to how it will do on the return trip which will be more of an uphill pull toward the end.

Jerry Curtis
2406 T
2000 LTD Ford F250 4x4 7.3L
 
Owning older truck to tow with.

Jerry,at a boy!! way to go with your trusted "old friend" Max it out until you get your dollar at the scrap yard. I too maintain the vehicles of several years ago are better built than the new ones. Metal parts are better than plastic that cracks.
 
2007 Toyota Tacoma 4.0 L v6, Quad Cab automatic 4WD TRD. Pushing 98000 miles and still runs like new!
17T Hi-LO loaded to 3500 lbs with a 6000 lbs. tow capacity and 600 lb. max Hitch weight.
with the cruise set (that I could not do with my other RV) on 70 and 700 miles round trip from Allen Park, Mi to Mackinac City, Mi. Disengaging the cruise on steep uphill climbs and let the transmission stay in D3 instead of OD.
MPG 15.2

Will add Pictures when I bring it home to winterize next weekend.

Sooooooooooooooooo Much Better!! I love my Hi-Lo :)

When I had my RoadRunner billboard 18' loaded to 3500 lbs. It was 10 MPG spot on.

Update!! Here are the pics I promised!! I added them in the picture thread but
I know I said I would post them here. :)

-Mike
 

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Jeep Grand Cherokee Mileage

2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee-4.7Liter
Towing:2705T Hi Lo
Equalizer Hitch
7002 Miles-Virginia to Utah to Wyoming to Montana to Dakota to Virginia
Average 12 mpg on entire trip over 30 days. October 2013.
Ran Nitrogen at 40# in all Jeep tires! Cruised at 60-65mph most of the time.
Used TOW mode switch which protect trans from constantly shifting-basically does away with OD.
Have a brand new trans($4500) with OEM cooler-fluid looked brand new after the trip.
 
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Blacksburg

I have my mileage for our first trip out to Blacksburg, VA from the Richmond, VA area, 220 miles one way.

I got a very disappointing 10.6088 mpg going out. I did drive almost the entire 220 miles in regular drive, rather than OD for most of the trip.

Pulling the trailer back home, I got 13.46098 mpg. 3 things may have contributed to that. The long climb (about 8 miles) up C'burg mountain is not in play going home. I used OD most of the trip. Finally, I was using real gasoline going home. I found a gasoline store that sells 100% gasoline, no ethanol.

This coming weekend I'll be pulling the trailer back out. This time I'll have the regular junk gasoline (10% ethanol) but will leave it in OD when possible ( most of the way). I'll see if the mpg increases any over my last trip out.

WE live in Bburg with our 2705T. Cburg mountain is a killer on gas mileage. If you come up for a game, we can compare notes!! Joe Jones
 
Earlier this summer I got 12.8 mpg average for 3 tanks of gas under these conditions:

Trailer: 2408T
Tow Vehicle: 2010 Nissan Frontier, Crew Cab, 4x4, V6
Trailer and truck within 100-200 lb of max gross weight each
60-65 mph on hilly highways
 
MPG, MPH, RPM, and any other acronyms I can think of

My wife and I took a trip this summer in our newly refurbished Hi-Lo. We spent several weeks going about four thousand miles all over the Southwest (Utah, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, and my beloved Texas) beginning and ending in Lubbock, TX. We tackled plenty of mountains and deserts and whatnot.

We pulled a 2288 with out 2002 Chevy Avalanche 1500 Z66 (both loaded down pretty good). At 55 MPH we got between 17-18 MPG (about 1400 RPM). At 65 MPH that dropped to 13-14 MPG (about 1800 RPM). This old truck has 180,000 miles, and I run a little Marvel Mystery Oil in the Gas and oil.

We took it nice and slow, staying mostly on two-lane blacktop. We had a terrific time.

Slower is better.
 
Mpg

Glad to hear you had a good long trip this summer. Got to love those older trucks and HiLo combinations. We also have a 1990 25ft. classic that also has been restored and a 1997 F250 with 145,000 miles. The truck is in showroom condition. One thing about the older HiLo is that they were built very sturdy and no mater what goes wrong it is fixable.
 

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