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Average Gas Mileage Poll


Average Gas Mileage Poll  

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Posted
Please post your trucks configuration and mileage after voting.  Is your truck stock?  Comments?  What made the biggest improvement?
Posted
My 6.0 gets good mileage for the way I use it, alot of towing and I live in hilly terrain, the truck is stock for now and I'd like to do some mods some time, it doesn't change more than 3mpg at the most no matter where or what I tow.
Posted
On average, city, highway, offroad and towing aprox. 12 mpg.  Modifications are 6" RCD lift, 285 BFG, Cat Back Dual Exhaust, K&N, 160 degree thermostat, Hypertech Programmer III, Mag-hytech Transmission Pan
Posted

Mine is all stock.

TRIP OD 29374.9

Gallons 2077.3

Cost $2730.43

MPG    14.14

Cost per mile $0.093

HOURS 1086.40

HRS PER TANK  10.29

MPH  average 33.08

Gallons per Hour  2.27

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
Mine is 02 k2500 8600gvw and was getting a flat 10mpg until they overhauled the trans at 3200 miles and gave me over drive! Now its pretty consistant at 13-13.5mpg. 3.73's.
Posted
Did anyone notice a difference once their truck was broken-in?  I'm getting 12.4 right now but I bet I would get a lot better if I could stay off of the gas in the city.  But I like hearing this thing run! :cheers:
Posted
Did anyone notice a difference once their truck was broken-in?  I'm getting 12.4 right now but I bet I would get a lot better if I could stay off of the gas in the city.

Mine is actually still getting better and I now have almost 7500 miles on it.  And I have the same problem too...  A heavy foot in town!!!  It's fun when you are sitting beside a kid in a 6 cyl Mustang or something similar and easily pull away from him when the light turns green.  My truck normally is shifting at 2500 to 3000 RPM.

Posted

Got well under 8, driving slow, start/stop around construction site (idling a lot with the A/C on) :cheers:

 

Get around 13.8 highway w/A/C on.

 

 

 

02 2500HD CC

Posted

I'm getting 14.1 MPG.

Average 60 miles total to & from work every day, 70% highway & 30% city.

2002 2500HD 6.0 is still as is from factory, no engine or tire mods, but plan some in near future.

Posted
I have gotten 8 to 10 pulling my trailers 6000-7500 lbs. Got 11.something one time .Daily use city and interstste I get 12-13. I ran it one time on a 200 mile trip empty and got solid 17. This was using cruise at 60 mph trying to get good MPG.   You can get decent MPG if you try.
Posted

I get around 12.5mpg in town and towing 3000lb boat (3rd gear and tow haul mode). I like the look on other drivers faces when I pass them going uphill in the hammer lane when towing the boat. I have gotten 17mpg on one leg of a 450 mile highway trip (not towing) with the cruise on 70mph. Average highway mileage is 16mpg. My only beef with the truck is the small gas tank. My previous trucks were longbeds with 35 gallon tanks. I have put 25 gallons in the 26 gallon tank and the warning light was not on! Does anyone know if there is a reserve for the gas tank?

 

Bob G.

Posted
I get 14.5 summer and 13.5 winter city, 16 highway @ 70 mph . Mileage kept getting better up to 12k then leveled off. Now at 37k. 6.0,5-spd.,3.73.

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    • I thought I would use your thread and add to it as I just did my first longer drive with my truck in the last couple of days. I drove from the Grande Prairie area of Alberta down to Edmonton and most of where I drove in the city was the ring road so fairly free flowing but a bit of stop and go as well in the city. Stayed the night and returned home and not too many stops along the way each way but every restart and certainly every cold start sets it back for fuel mileage. Why I say that is I see some people will cherry pick a fuel mileage leg after the vehicle had been warmed up driveline wise before hand and its a forgiving ( easy rolling drive leg for example ) and call that their fuel mileage which can give a false perception of reality. I was not heavily loaded at all but never the less the flip bak cover, rubber bed mat, various tools etc and extra jerry cans of fuel all way up to a few hundred pounds of dead weight so its not an empty truck. The cold inflation tire pressures are set more near the freezing point so once they are warmed up driving I was showing 45 front and over 40 rear and realize high inflation pressures would help a little in fuel mileage but certainly not the ride on our crap sections of highway. The weather was good so was not raining as that can really drag mileage down, in fact I had a bit of a tail wind on average driving home. Most people on here would never have driven on that freeway to visualize it but its got a fair bit of rolling type of landscape with numerous river valleys. For the most part I had it on cruise set to 62 although kicking it off if I caught it in time before it started down shifting and self braking going down the grades. Most of the more substantial grades its shifting into 7th I believe as 8th just doesn't have it. Total distance round trip was 643 miles and my overall average and I did refuel three times in all, figured out to 17.65 miles per US gallon. My best fuel mileage section refuel within all of this figured out to 18.46 and these are all hand calculated figures. I find if anything that the trucks computer can be over optimistic, sometimes its pretty close but other times its stretching it. On paper persay in theory the truck would have just about made it on fumes for that whole drive without refueling once.    Which made me think of the topic thread of the wonder if these trucks could do 20 mpg and that is a good question, certainly would have to be on an easy going flat highway, no head wind, the right temperature, not packing around a bunch of dead weight and puttering along even slower than I was I would suspect and going steady and not stopping to smell the flowers or take a piss !. It probably is possible but not without effort to attain that with the wind resistance and weight of these trucks. Of course on my drive most people are passing me if they have the power as per loaded highway tractors, never mind a lot of speedy vehicles but the speed limit is 68 and most are at or well over that. 
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    • That makes sense, and I think you are describing the real product problem. Capturing data is the easy part. If the owner or technician has to manually dig through five minutes of millisecond-level logs, the product has already failed. The device would be at the ECM harness, not at the OBD port, so I agree that data retrieval and event marking need to be thought through carefully. The way I am thinking about the architecture is: The recorder itself should not depend on a phone, app, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or cloud connection to capture the event. It should always keep a local rolling buffer and lock the event locally. A button, phone app, or small cabin device would only act as an event marker. If the driver feels a stumble and presses the button 10–30 seconds later, the pre-buffer has to already contain the useful data. For data retrieval, the practical options would be a sealed service USB lead, Wi-Fi download, or a phone/cabin companion device. I would not expect the owner to remove the ECM-side module or work with raw files directly. The cloud or AI side would be for interpretation, not for capturing the event. The truck may have no connection when the issue happens, so the evidence has to be saved locally first. After that, cloud processing could help decode the data, compare it against baselines, and generate a readable report. For the first version, I would keep the automatic triggers conservative and objective: driver event marker bus-off error passive voltage drop / brownout device reset FIFO or queue overflow a normally periodic message disappearing side-to-side communication mismatch, if the topology supports that For “learning normal,” I agree with your point, but I would not want to overclaim it as automatic root-cause diagnosis at first. A realistic first step would be learned baseline comparison for that specific vehicle and operating condition. For example, a value would only be compared against similar conditions: RPM range load / MAP throttle position gear / vehicle speed coolant and oil temperature battery voltage AFM/DFM state, if decoded and validated Then the report could flag things like: this periodic message disappeared compared with its normal timing this value deviated from this vehicle’s normal range under similar conditions the same abnormal pattern repeated after the same type of event the anomaly occurred together with voltage, oil-pressure, misfire, or communication changes But I would still call that “abnormal pattern detected,” not “replace this part,” unless there is enough validated repair data behind it. So the intended product would not be “here is a huge log.” It would need to be an event package: what triggered the capture how much pre/post data was preserved what changed before and after the event whether the device itself reset, overflowed, or saw a bus error selected graphs around the event raw data only as supporting evidence From your perspective, what would make this kind of report useful instead of just another datalog? For example: What are the top 5 parameters or events you would want highlighted first? Would you trust a learned baseline for that specific vehicle, or would you prefer fixed thresholds? How much false-positive flagging would be acceptable before you stopped looking at the reports? What would a one-page report need to show for an independent shop to take it seriously? For misfire, AFM/DFM, oil pressure, or U-code complaints, what would you want the tool to flag automatically?
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