Gary747
04-21-2006, 10:57 PM
This is my first post on this site! Just so happens, also for the first time, I paid $3.00 plus a gallon for regular gas. These "firsts" are related.
I drove my truck back & forth to work this week, as my Jeep is on blocks. That pickup is typically used to haul my slide-in camper, but when empty, it also serves as my backup daily driver. As it works out, the Jeep is so reliable that the truck battery often goes dead from non-use! Anyway, on Thursday, it cost me $75 to fill up the truck, which is a:
1998 GMC K3500 Crew Cab 4wd 454 cid (7.4 liter) automatic, 4.10 rear differential, with single rear wheels (not a dually).
All this yields a 10.0 to 10.5 miles/gallon average
I'd be interested to hear anyones' story based upon their experience of how changing the differential ratio affects fuel mileage. RPM differences are fairly straight-forward to calculate, but I wonder what people actually gained (or lost) in MPG after modifying their differential.
If the goal is better mileage, do you think modifying the differential is worth the effort?
Gary P.
I drove my truck back & forth to work this week, as my Jeep is on blocks. That pickup is typically used to haul my slide-in camper, but when empty, it also serves as my backup daily driver. As it works out, the Jeep is so reliable that the truck battery often goes dead from non-use! Anyway, on Thursday, it cost me $75 to fill up the truck, which is a:
1998 GMC K3500 Crew Cab 4wd 454 cid (7.4 liter) automatic, 4.10 rear differential, with single rear wheels (not a dually).
All this yields a 10.0 to 10.5 miles/gallon average
I'd be interested to hear anyones' story based upon their experience of how changing the differential ratio affects fuel mileage. RPM differences are fairly straight-forward to calculate, but I wonder what people actually gained (or lost) in MPG after modifying their differential.
If the goal is better mileage, do you think modifying the differential is worth the effort?
Gary P.