Forum Discussion
29 Replies
- Turtle_n_PeepsExplorer
But a cylinder stuffed with more fuel/air will net more power from the same fuel due to the higher compression....so you gain more power per fuel.
And where does the energy come from to compress that air for a higher compression come from? It takes a lot of energy to run an air compressor.
Tell you what, you just find me a supercharged engine, turbo or driven, that has a better BSFC dyno run than an N/A engine and post it up and I will believe you. And make sure it's apples to apples.
Or you can read about what happened to this guy that thought the same thing as you. :E - rhagfoExplorer III
marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
06Fargo wrote:
Thanks for your responses so far -
I forgot to also ask what your truck's empty mpg averaged?
What if a guy had a V10, normalized for high altitude with a turbo kit vs. a late model smogdiesel?
A turbo packs more air in the cylinder. Since a gas engine likes to run stoichiometric guess what it will pull in with it?
Yep; that liquid stuff that costs a lot. Depending on how much boost you run it can pull in twice the amount of that liquid stuff, or even more.
But a cylinder stuffed with more fuel/air will net more power from the same fuel due to the higher compression....so you gain more power per fuel.
You still need to fight detonation (ping). - marcsbigfoot20bExplorer
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
06Fargo wrote:
Thanks for your responses so far -
I forgot to also ask what your truck's empty mpg averaged?
What if a guy had a V10, normalized for high altitude with a turbo kit vs. a late model smogdiesel?
A turbo packs more air in the cylinder. Since a gas engine likes to run stoichiometric guess what it will pull in with it?
Yep; that liquid stuff that costs a lot. Depending on how much boost you run it can pull in twice the amount of that liquid stuff, or even more.
But a cylinder stuffed with more fuel/air will net more power from the same fuel due to the higher compression....so you gain more power per fuel. - Turtle_n_PeepsExplorer
06Fargo wrote:
Thanks for your responses so far -
I forgot to also ask what your truck's empty mpg averaged?
What if a guy had a V10, normalized for high altitude with a turbo kit vs. a late model smogdiesel?
A turbo packs more air in the cylinder. Since a gas engine likes to run stoichiometric guess what it will pull in with it?
Yep; that liquid stuff that costs a lot. Depending on how much boost you run it can pull in twice the amount of that liquid stuff, or even more. - Campin_LIExplorerMy Excursion with V10 towing a 10,000 lb travel trailer averages 7.8 mpg at mixed speeds
- SuperchargedExplorerI found the easy way is buy all the gas you want, don't check the monthly bill, just pay it and forget about it. Life is to short now.
- lbrjetExplorerThat is a lot of weight even for the mighty V10. I would budget for 7 MPG and if you get slightly higher be happy.
- TOOBOLDExplorerWe tow a 10K 5th wheel with our '05 F350 CC,LB 4.30 axle and get 9mpg when DH goes 62mph any faster and we're at 8mpg. Empty 12-13mpg.
- marcsbigfoot20bExplorerWow I don't feel so bad now.
I tow my 7000 lb 27 ft bigfoot with my 99 tahoe 4x4 with 150,000 miles on it and get about 9.8 mpg on the ultra gauge, like a scan gauge.
That is at 70 mph.
No trailer 19 mpg at 70 :)
Of course I have added serious mods, like efi live custom tune, 1.6 scorpion dual roller rockers, ported throttle body, VMAX manifold spacer, ceramic coated long tube headers and custom 3" exhaust , electric cooling fans, 180 thermostat, k&n filter, etc.
But I still wish I had a diesel or v10 for the big hills. - Dave_H_MExplorer II:h bid time better hang onto that V10. That mileage is beating the socks off of what my 6.2 gets.
About RV Tips & Tricks
Looking for advice before your next adventure? Look no further.25,191 PostsLatest Activity: Apr 01, 2026