Some of you guys are not calculating the payback cost correctly. Under my circumstances, this would be the payback for the $288 injectors.
Stock gets measured 21 mpg @ 70 mph, unloaded.
If the 275 injectors added 1 mpg, it would take 88,700 miles to pay back.
Here's the math:
(Before the injectors) 88,700 miles / 21 m. p. g. = 4224 gallons. At $1. 50 gallon, the 4224 gal. costs = $6,335. 71
(After the injectors) 88,700 miles / 22 m. p. g. = 4032 gallons. At $1. 50 gallon, the 4032 gal. costs = $6,047. 73 + $288. 00 (for the injectors) = $6335. 73
Only variances I can think of for each individual out there is the cost of fuel and how much you actually pay for the injectors. As the cost of injectors and/or fuel increases the miles to break even grows quickly. Takes a while to pay it back though.
One last thing, I personally doubt the injectors give you any mpg gain, regardless of what any sales literature says. Doing hard numbers and driving long distances under close to the same driving conditions is very difficult, but would be the only way to know for sure. I do though, consistently run over the same long distance unloaded, so I have a good baseline. If whoever sold the injectors wanted to give me a set for long enough to do some testing (then I'd give them back), I would create a "real" baseline to determine the difference in mpg.
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Y2K 2500 Cummins ETC/DEE, SLT+, 4X4, Quad, LB, Intense Blue Sport, 3. 54 anti-spin, rear aux. springs (camper special), sliding rear window, all options except cab clearance lights including agate leather, totally stock, + a mpg increaser goodie. Since everybody else listed their toys, I will too.
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