This is the third Cummins truck I have had. 2016 crew cab, Laramie 4x4. 68RFE transmission, 3.42 gears. It has 34" Michelin AT2 tires, just one size up from stock. Just about 54k miles.
My issue is that I am getting a solid 15-16mpg highway. Granted, the speed limit is 75 for most of my drive, so I typically set the cruise at 80.
I had a 2017 with 3.73s and stock Trashforce tires that would run 22mpg at 75.
Any ideas? Besides the mileage, it seems to have no issues.
Congratulations on achieving while solo what mine averages towing my 35’ TT.
But you’ll get “there” 40-minutes ahead of me on a 300-mile day.
Diesel pickups need a plan. Excessive speed ain’t part of it. Can’t slow and sure can’t maneuver.
The Average MPG (all miles & all gallons) has to be nearly 18-MPG to make a 350k mile engine life estimate given that Average MPH can be kept above 30-MPH. “Steady State” matters, not mpg at some rice burner road speed.
Fewest cold starts, no idling, makes every stop light, etc. = MPG. (And more).
Make a plan plays to strengths:
ability to do work greatest number of miles with highest reliability at lowest cost. Cut out “stupid”.
The only MPG figure that matters is the Average. All miles + all gallons.
Separating Highway from City MPG isn’t relevant
except to note how
low one can keep the percentage spread between them. Can’t get it down to 10%?
Why not? (It’s only a question of steady state). Highest highway MPG
is always under 60-MPH. Get that baseline number and apply to city mpg to work the percent spread downwards.
The operator is the problem which produces results given a plan. One cares about cost, life, reliability and can still work hard with high miles, . . or he doesn’t. (Actions prove it).
Tire & brake life are the other indicators past MPG that a plan is in effect and successful. Or not.
At $4/gal price of diesel, I worked my city average percent down to 11%. Made a plan. The savings was such it funded 5,000-miles of towing my trailer for the same annual fuel budget.
So you blew past me on the highway at the same MPG. Just remember that
my vacation fuel was free.
In the past twenty some years of online forums this “problem” of vehicle blamed for driver inability to adapt hasn’t ever changed.
.