Forum Discussion

burgess001's avatar
burgess001
Explorer
Jul 22, 2021

Fuel Mileage on 8.1 Workhorse

I drove DP's for years. Thinking about a 30 ft Workhorse. What kind of gas mileage can I expect
  • Most class A gas tank are 80 gallons. So at 6 mpg you can go 120 miles to a 1/4 tank. I start looking for a station at 1/4 tank. Out west I’ll start looking at 1/2 tank because it can be pretty far between stations out there.

    Realistically you can easily go 400 miles before you need to fill up. But you will have to stop before you ever need gas!
  • I logged every gallon of gas I've bought over the past 95,000 miles and have averaged 7.1 mpg on my 2004 W22 36 foot coach pulling a 4,000lb toad.

    Those miles almost always included going over mountains in the west.

    I drive at 55 MPH to 62 MPH.

    My tank holds 75 gallons and I calculate 420 miles at the most on a tank of gas although I always start looking for a gas station when I get down to a half tank or, especially when crossing a desert.
  • dodge guy and ArchHoagland,

    I agree with your math and refueling policies. The only thing I'd add is that the height for the pick-up tube for the generator is usually set at about the 1/4 full mark on the gas tank. So if you are using the generator, you definitely want to be looking for fuel well before the 1/4 full point on the tank. And up and down hills might even cause it to start sucking air before that point is reached. In our rig we usually travel with the generator running to keep the family comfortable, so I used to fill up around the 325-350 mile point which seemed to work well for us.

    ~Rick
  • Rick Jay wrote:
    dodge guy and ArchHoagland,

    I agree with your math and refueling policies. The only thing I'd add is that the height for the pick-up tube for the generator is usually set at about the 1/4 full mark on the gas tank. So if you are using the generator, you definitely want to be looking for fuel well before the 1/4 full point on the tank. And up and down hills might even cause it to start sucking air before that point is reached. In our rig we usually travel with the generator running to keep the family comfortable, so I used to fill up around the 325-350 mile point which seemed to work well for us.

    ~Rick


    Yes, I forgot to add that. Although I have ran the tank down to 1/8 and the generator still ran. But I was coming into Denver and filled right off I70 before I got into the mountains.
    So yes, you have to know where the cutoff is for the generator fuel pickup.
  • I have a 60 gallon tank and use 6 mpg as my baseline mileage.
    Looking for fuel and beer around 300 miles.
  • burgess001 wrote:
    I drove DP's for years. Thinking about a 30 ft Workhorse. What kind of gas mileage can I expect


    All depends on the tail wind, down hill is great gas mileage
  • Thanks everyone. We did go with a V10 Class C. The Workhorses we found were pretty much used up.
  • wa8yxm's avatar
    wa8yxm
    Explorer III
    I drove a 2005 Damon Intruder 377W (Workhorse 8.1L) for 15 years
    Millage. Lowest I ever got was 6 (Major headwind)
    Highest 13.8 (I kid you not the tumble weeds were going down the road passing me at nearly 100 MPH Straight down the very straight (I-10) road.. Was ... Fun (not) when I exited for the night)

    Normal depended on my towed. 7-8 towing a 2001 Dodge neon using a transmission lube pump (2500 pound towed)
    8-9 towing a 1992 Chevy Lumina APV (4000 pounds) with a Axle lock. I do not knwo if this was because the larger APV "Spoiled" the air flow or the added drag of the automatic transmission on the Neon.
    Bobtail (no towed car) about the same as with the Lumina (Argument for spoiled air flow)

    Fresh Wax Job 10-11MPG
    Anyone care to guess why I waxed spring and fall before my semi-annual migration hike?
  • Why do we keep getting MPG questions? If you do even the most simple search you will find something like 1000 posts on MPG. None of them mean a dang thing since everyone has a different way of calculating this number (with generator, without generator, traveling East, Traveling West, Headwind, Tailwind and on and on ad nauseam). MPG is, by far, the least of all of any RVers concerns when it comes to cost of ownership.