Well I must say at this point there must be something terribly wrong as my milage actually went down. On repeated trips the milage has decreased by almost 2 MPG rather than increased. The truck seems to be running happier at the lower RPM's but the fuel economy tells a different story. It seems like the ECM figures any running around the city is excessive idling and goes into regen as soon as there is any sustained highway speeds. Also we have been hit with a bad cold spell and lots of snow and the milage also has taken a tumble, never had a diesel do this before.
... because the speedo runs off a revs per mile counter on the axle right?No change is needed with this year truck,the tire size will change it but not the gear ratio.
Bob
I can see where lots of snow being pushed around by the tires and cold weather would affect mpg. Maybe a couple more tank fulls will give better info.
There may be something going on here that I have noticed with just about every gasser vehicle I have owned for the last 20 years. At about 75-80 mph, they all get better mileage than if you slow down 5 or 10 mph. I believe the manufacturers tune the computers to pass the EPA smog test which is done well within the typical "legal" speeds we all normally drive. If you speed up to slightly above typical highway speeds the computer gets "happy" and allows better timing and fuel settings and you end up with better mileage. I had an 89 Toyota Camry 2. 0/5 speed that got 33 mpg at a steady 65-70mph.
If I kicked it up to 80-85 it would get 38-40 and it felt a lot happier at that speed. 89 BMW 525i, same thing; 23-24 at steady 65-70 and 26-27 at 80+ and a much nicer running engine. You have effectively slowed the truck down with the gear change. I don't know if what I've seen on cars of the past is applicable to a late model diesel or not. Maybe it's just not a good thing on a DPF-equiped truck. No telling what surprises lurk in the new ECMs.
I can see where lots of snow being pushed around by the tires and cold weather would affect mpg. Maybe a couple more tank fulls will give better info.
At about 75-80 mph, they all get better mileage than if you slow down 5 or 10 mph.
DPKetchum,
You have some very good points. I bought a diesel truck to tow 5000 pounds with about 3000 miles a year. The rest of the 22,000 miles is with no load. I have plenty of friends who have gas Dodge trucks and the diesels get more than 50% better fuel economy. The time I tow empty, I would like to get the best mileage I can.
This board is full of products and ways that guys are trying to get better mileage. The way I am trying to is yet another way that nobody has done before.
This might be a poor example but here goes... . a new Corvette is a very fast and powerful vehicle and sucks fuel quite rapidly when driven hard, but can get 32+ MPG on the highway due to gearing in top gear.
You guys might be right. I may be totally fooled about RPM's and fuel economy, EGT's, etc. I just know that when I slow down, I get dramatically better fuel economy and it all can't be attributed to wind resistance.
Doing the 3. 42 gear swap might render my truck useless for towing. As someone else suggested, one could put smaller diameter tires on to bring it right back to the gearing it has right now for the 10% towing I do, which is all at one time.
I can't believe 16 pages of response to this question. Has anyone converted a stock 3/4 ton with G56 to the 3. 42? What was the result in towing?
Has anyone converted a stock 3/4 ton with G56 to the 3. 42?