I love it! The low end torque is great too.Hey Notedhillbilly - that's good mpg's. I'm seriously considering a diesel swap.
Turbo Diesel YJ
https://www.overlandbound.com/forums/index.php?threads/8019/
I love it! The low end torque is great too.Hey Notedhillbilly - that's good mpg's. I'm seriously considering a diesel swap.
Benefactor
Advocate III
Enthusiast III
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
wait a minute. I had an 04 TJ. Loaded down with all our expo gear we were lucky to crack 11 MPG. empty back and forth to work, 54 mile round trip on country roads I might crack 14 MPG on a good day with a tail wind. And, all this was being lightfooted. How in the world are you getting 27 mpg? 17 with a four cylinder I can believe, but 27? Miles? Kilometers maybe.2004 Jeep TJ - 27 mpg on BFG KO2's (30X9.5X15) at 70 mph
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
yes, hoping most folks understand that it is between 5 and 6% per inch over stock.Hmmm, I'm getting 17.3. Makes me wonder. You do know if you go to oversized tires you need to change the speedo gear not only for the speedometer but the odometer? That way you get the correct miles traveled. I did put in 2" exhaust and k&n air filter and reset the fuel trim. So like Egans truck, after throwing the 35's on which are what 2 sizes over stock? And didn't change the speedo gear, his odometer is going to show less miles traveled. So if your Gps is showing 5 mph over your speedo the odometer is off like 11% (that's what I have read not sure if it is exact). Which is a lot of miles your not calculating into your fuel calculation. It's just hard for me to believe my jeep is getting better or the same gas mileage as a Toyota like Steves rig is. Something's wrong I can feel it :}.
The next things on my agenda for fuel consumption are locking hubs, Electric fan and a header. In that order.
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Enthusiast III
I have a Scan Gauge II that reads the OB II that reads 15 perimeters of your auto system 4 at a time i usually show Mpg/Radiator temp/Tranny temp and Engine load - So on level ground - 70 mph - the Mpg indicator shows 27wait a minute. I had an 04 TJ. Loaded down with all our expo gear we were lucky to crack 11 MPG. empty back and forth to work, 54 mile round trip on country roads I might crack 14 MPG on a good day with a tail wind. And, all this was being lightfooted. How in the world are you getting 27 mpg? 17 with a four cylinder I can believe, but 27? Miles? Kilometers maybe.
Benefactor
Have you checked the speedo with a GPS. If your OBDII has bad information, such as size of tires, so will your Scan Gaige II.I have a Scan Gauge II that reads the OB II that reads 15 perimeters of your auto system 4 at a time i usually show Mpg/Radiator temp/Tranny temp and Engine load - So on level ground - 70 mph - the Mpg indicator shows 27
Benefactor
Member II
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Not to pick an argument, I just want to help you out here. I drove 18 wheelers for 25 years, since about the mid-90s our power units had the oem software that kept close track of MPG, speed, distance, engine temps, exhaust temp, turbo pressure, etc etc etc. Often times my instant readout of MPG would show 30,40, 50 and even higher on the downhill. On the flat sometimes as much as 15 or 16 MPG. That's far from what the reality was as the power units were lucky to average 6.8 MPG. And yes, companies keep track of it in tenths of a gallon. In reality, you are getting between 14 and 17 mpg. If you are doing 70mph in any wrangler drop those numbers down to 10 to 13 MPG.I have a Scan Gauge II that reads the OB II that reads 15 perimeters of your auto system 4 at a time i usually show Mpg/Radiator temp/Tranny temp and Engine load - So on level ground - 70 mph - the Mpg indicator shows 27
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
That is really good. Flat roads all the way. Is that one of those engines that shut down cylinders until they are needed for pulling power?I just went to Louisiana last week in the Ram (2016, 5.7 Hemi, 4x4 Crew Cab).
I got 21 / 22 on the trip hand calculated and with the computer ( it was on the money). I was amazed it did that well, but it was literally ALL Interstate except a few miles.
Still, that's incredible to me...
Pathfinder I
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
I have learned to avoid fueling up in Missouri . I do know that higher ethanol content leads to lower MPG. As much as 20% lower and Mo, has a very high concentrate of ethanolI'm driving a 2014 Toyota Tacoma double cab short bed. 265/75 R16 tires, 3" Bilstein/OME lift, and an ARE cap. For a while I had a roof top tent and awning mounted on my cap. Now on to the fuel economy.
I've found that regardless of the roof top tent and awning which I have since sold, I average around 17.5 MPG with a mix of city and highway driving. On my cross country trip from Pennsylvania to Arizona for Overland Expo, I got up to 21 MPG going west across Tennessee on I40. But coming back across the center of the country on I70 I was getting as little as 14 MPG. That confuses me because it seemed very flat coming back east on I70. The only thing I can think of that would have caused the change in fuel economy is possibly a head wind, or bad batch of gas across the mid-west.