Just doing my part to increase postings!
If any of my fellow First Gen'ers have read any of my recent postings you know that a prestine '92 W250 Dodge was purchased in Connecticut last weekend. My '92 W250 was also in Connecticut getting some work done on it by Ted @ JRE. This left us Drafting each other back to Nashville for a 1000 miles! What kind of MPG did we get? There was quite difference to my surprise.
Keeno's ride: W250 5 spd. 3. 54 gears, LSD, 14cm2 housing with 12" x 32. 7" mud tires
C. X. ride: W250 5 spd. 3. 54 gears, Open Diff, 16cm2 housing with 9. 5" x 36" highway tread
Both trucks have been identically set up by JRE and have enhanced injector pumps, HO injectors & modified Banks 3 1/2" exhaust utilizing a Walker straight thru muffler. Besides the difference in tires the 'Keeno ride' has a 2 1/2" front suspension lift while the 'C. X. ride' has a 4+" lift in all corners.
Now for mileage over 1000 total miles:
Note: All MPG calculated using Keeno's odometer readings as a baseline.
Keeno: 19. 0 mpg average
C. X. : 21. 7 mpg average
I talked to Ted Jannetty about the MPG differences between 2 identically modified trucks in the engine department. He stated that the overall gear ratio differences between my almost 33" wide aggressive tires & the 36" narrow highway treaded tires is significant for a 1 to 1. 5 mpg advantage for the 'C. X. ride'.
Ted also mention that the differences between the 14cm2 VS 16cm2 housing is more significant than the tires. He mentioned that at highway speeds the 14cm2 housing builds more boost than the 16cm2 housing therefore resulting in more fuel being burned for a given speed. So I went home and check on the identical Banks boost gages and sure enough there is a 5-6 PSI difference. The 14cm2 is building 7-8 PSI of boost over the same strech of highway & speed while the 16cm2 housing is somewhere in the 2-3 PSI range.
When you add the differences of tires (height & width) with the different housing sizes you get significantly different MPG!
Just my observations over the last 1000 miles!
... ... ... Keeno
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1992 W250 5spd. 3. 54 gears, LSD, JRE enhanced VE Injector Pump, BD High Output Injectors, Banks "Stinger Plus" consisting of a 14cm2 wastegated housing, 3 1/2" JRE modified exhaust/muffler, pyro/boost gages, K&N, Skyjacker 2 1/2" front suspension lift to clear 305/70R/16 Goodyear MT's, Mag-Hytec, Amsoil
If any of my fellow First Gen'ers have read any of my recent postings you know that a prestine '92 W250 Dodge was purchased in Connecticut last weekend. My '92 W250 was also in Connecticut getting some work done on it by Ted @ JRE. This left us Drafting each other back to Nashville for a 1000 miles! What kind of MPG did we get? There was quite difference to my surprise.
Keeno's ride: W250 5 spd. 3. 54 gears, LSD, 14cm2 housing with 12" x 32. 7" mud tires
C. X. ride: W250 5 spd. 3. 54 gears, Open Diff, 16cm2 housing with 9. 5" x 36" highway tread
Both trucks have been identically set up by JRE and have enhanced injector pumps, HO injectors & modified Banks 3 1/2" exhaust utilizing a Walker straight thru muffler. Besides the difference in tires the 'Keeno ride' has a 2 1/2" front suspension lift while the 'C. X. ride' has a 4+" lift in all corners.
Now for mileage over 1000 total miles:
Note: All MPG calculated using Keeno's odometer readings as a baseline.
Keeno: 19. 0 mpg average
C. X. : 21. 7 mpg average
I talked to Ted Jannetty about the MPG differences between 2 identically modified trucks in the engine department. He stated that the overall gear ratio differences between my almost 33" wide aggressive tires & the 36" narrow highway treaded tires is significant for a 1 to 1. 5 mpg advantage for the 'C. X. ride'.
Ted also mention that the differences between the 14cm2 VS 16cm2 housing is more significant than the tires. He mentioned that at highway speeds the 14cm2 housing builds more boost than the 16cm2 housing therefore resulting in more fuel being burned for a given speed. So I went home and check on the identical Banks boost gages and sure enough there is a 5-6 PSI difference. The 14cm2 is building 7-8 PSI of boost over the same strech of highway & speed while the 16cm2 housing is somewhere in the 2-3 PSI range.
When you add the differences of tires (height & width) with the different housing sizes you get significantly different MPG!
Just my observations over the last 1000 miles!
... ... ... Keeno
------------------
1992 W250 5spd. 3. 54 gears, LSD, JRE enhanced VE Injector Pump, BD High Output Injectors, Banks "Stinger Plus" consisting of a 14cm2 wastegated housing, 3 1/2" JRE modified exhaust/muffler, pyro/boost gages, K&N, Skyjacker 2 1/2" front suspension lift to clear 305/70R/16 Goodyear MT's, Mag-Hytec, Amsoil