gsbrockman
TDR MEMBER
I'm right and you are an idiot....means I am right and you are an idiot.
Reallllllllll classssssss.

I'm right and you are an idiot....means I am right and you are an idiot.
All I can add is "assume" = "***" out of "u" and "me"....
My usual tank of fuel is roughly 80/20, city/freeway miles, with a short freeway commute. Summer months the evic is usually in the 15.6 to 15.8 mpg range, during the so cal winters, the evic shows in the 14.4 to 14.8 range. My hand calcs are pretty much 1 mpg less........again..... Because of some serious health issues (the wife) I have yet to do any towing of any distance or even a full tank of freeway miles. I'm quite curious of my towing mileage and empty trip mileage but that's going to have to wait a bit.....
Sam
COurse if you want to, you could always get one of these…I have used it for several years now on my farm tank with no problems.
https://excel-equipment.com/farm/meters/fuel-meters/fill-rite-in-line-digital-meter.html
The fact of the matter is, whatever algorithm Ram engineers are using for the EVIC is flawed. Nobody gives a rats *** about a arbitrary number of miles prediction. That type of calculations is completely useless and inaccurate in the real world, period. The technology is there and capable of giving real world usable information on an instantaneous basis, why Ram doesn't utilize it is beyond me and apparently a lot of other people. Regular combustion engine prop planes have had this technology for decades and are very accurate.
If your one of those that feels it is accurate and it gives you a warm and cozy feeling, then so be it. Just don't expect the rest of us to feel the same way when we expect it to work in a practical and logical way.
I think the mystery is solved :-laf apparently EVIC's utilized in CTD's are most accurate when the operator runs some grade of unleaded versus #2 diesel fuel.My dash calculated is actually pretty good. The only problem is that it is averaging over a shorter timespan than my tank of gas.
I have a 2014 Laramie, I can go to the "A" & "B" trip and reset the mileage AND the MPG. It will calculate from the last reset. If you go to the economy screen, it will show what is happening "NOW" and the most recent. You can also reset the economy screen as well. All 3 can and will read differently, depending on when it was last reset. I use trip "A" for current tank fill mileage and MPG. I use trip "B" for the DEF consumption, as well the fuel economy for that period of DEF consumption. The economy lets me know what my foot is doing to the fuel economy right now.
First of all, the hammer screw driver anology has nothing to do with this and is ridiculous. Secondly, my comments weren't directed at any one person (ie. you). Third, I don't fly, but know several people that do and there is quite a bit of variance of throttle input throughout the flight between elevation changes, wind speeds, air temperature, etc.. From my understanding, from talking to these aviators, the systems in their planes at least, use vary simple math. Time/fuel consumed updated continuously. Maybe stunt pilots systems are different, IDK and to be honest IDC.If you were given a hammer and decided to use it as a screwdriver, would you be angry at the hammer manufacturer for not making it work better as a screw driver?
The MPG tool is evidently there to give you feedback on the recent MPG calculations. It is actually accurate for this. Fill up your tank. Reset your MPG calc. Drive for 30 miles. Refill. Hand calculate. I'm betting it will be spot on. Based on the recent driving, the EVIC makes a calculation on how far you'll be able to travel with your relatively current MPG calculation and the fuel left in the tank. Come up to a long steep grade? Things start changing depending on if you are going up or down.
It is nothing about warm and cozy. I'm just not angry at the tool manufacturer for making a tool that doesn't do the job it wasn't designed to do. I'm simply stating how it works.
Argue all you want. Cry about it. Enjoy your warm cozies.
On a side note, regular engine prop planes don't regularly accelerate, decelerate, stop at traffic lights, idle in the air, deal with greatly varying terrain, or stop for school busses. Ask the guy who drives stunt planes with greatly varying engine RPMs how accurate those fuel left gauges are for his maneuvers (hint, they aren't). Predictions over a smoother course are MUCH easier. I don't know though, maybe RAM corp is God and they magically know the traffic and terrain ahead of you and can tell you when the next hill will show up or the next school bus stops all traffic. Maybe your expectations are just obscenely ridiculous.
I have a 2014 Laramie
For those of us that use our trucks to put bread and butter on the table....it is "a big deal".I never knew people cared so much about mpg. Not a big deal though. I have never HC my mpg for this truck. I look at the EVIC once in awhile, don't really care what it says. I didn't buy it for MPG. It gets what it gets. I do really love the truck though. I think I get about 10 with the camper and 14 with out. This is based on the EVIC. Love the truck and the power. This is my 4th Dodge and the best for power.