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SplinterFL's avatar
SplinterFL
Explorer
Jul 24, 2014

MPG = Air Resistance vs Speed vs Weight

Improving MPG had me wondering, so I found a definitive calculator to make the math easier.

http://ecomodder.com/forum/tool-aero-rolling-resistance.php
Vehicle weight [1]: 10,000lb (TV & TT)
Crr - Coefficient of rolling resistance [2]: 0.01 (0.01=3-4 total axles, 0.015=5-8 total axles)
Cd - Coefficient of drag [3]: 0.5 (0.5=Pickup, 0.6=Semi-truck)
A - frontal area [4]: 70 [~8X9] (total area of TV/TT, minus clearance under)
Engine efficiency[6]: .22 (Gas=.22, Diesel=.3)

Below are some examples, different weights, speeds and sizes.

Say our trailer is shorter, or a popup.
10,000lb @ 50 sqft @ 40 MPH = 17.44 MPG
10,000lb @ 50 sqft @ 65 MPH = 9.53 MPG
5,000lb @ 50 sqft @ 40 MPH = 23.16 MPG
5,000lb @ 50 sqft @ 65 MPH = 11.02 MPG

Say your rig is average size
10,000lb @ 70 sqft @ 40 MPH = 14.50 MPG
10,000lb @ 70 sqft @ 65 MPH = 7.38 MPG
(Cut the weight in half, and rerun)
5,000lb @ 70 sqft @ 40 MPH = 18.26 MPG
5,000lb @ 70 sqft @ 65 MPH = 8.24 MPG

Same test, but say our trailer is huge say 12'.
10,000lb @ 100 sqft @ 40 MPH = 11.58 MPG
10,000lb @ 100 sqft @ 65 MPH = 5.51 MPG
5,000lb @ 100 sqft @ 40 MPH = 13.86 MPG
5,000lb @ 100 sqft @ 65 MPH = 5.98 MPG

Conclusion, speed and size matter most. Weight is only 1-2 MPG.
In 2018 they are mandating backup cameras, Telsa Auto is trying to get side mirrors removed by 2020 to increase MPG up to 6%. (mirrors have a lot of drag.)
  • I always like it when science confirms what I have established empirically.:W

    Speed and big frontal area are bad but you can also add wind, hills, fast accelerations, gas or diesel power and octane content of the gas to your mileage variation.

    By the time I drove the 50 plus miles from the dealer to home, I knew I would get 9 to 10 mpg. It has not varied much from there.

    One weekend I drove to a camp ground in very strong head winds and barely managed 8.5 mpg. :E going home with tail wind brought 10 plus mpg.

    Those who want good gas mileage generally stay with a Pop-up, egg or other more compact camper.

    In the end, convenience costs. It is the nature of the TT beast. :)
  • I agree with mooky. Frontal area is everything. That's why you will get better mileage from a Hi-lo than a conventional trailer.
  • FWIW my 8500lb TT gets me the same mpg as my 2500lb v-nose snowmobile trailer. OK, maybe .5-1 mpg. So as far as I'm concerned, weight means nothing and frontal area means everything. And v-noses gain you absolutely nothing! LOL
  • ktmrfs wrote:
    weight is in most cases a secondary effect in towing mpg. It comes into play when accelerating or when going up/down a grade. At a constant speed on level ground weight is a very secondary effect. Wind resistance is by far the dominant, effect.
    .


    Absolutely correct.
  • weight is in most cases a secondary effect in towing mpg. It comes into play when accelerating or when going up/down a grade. At a constant speed on level ground weight is a very secondary effect. Wind resistance is by far the dominant,effect.

    If your going over very hilly terrain or stop and go traffic, or constant changing speeds, then the weight can have a effect. It's effect is 1/2MV^2 where M=mass, V= change in velocity. Or if your going up/down hills its related to M*d Where M=mass and d= the CHANGE in elevation. If V is constant and d=0 mass doesn't have much effect. It increases rolling resistance and a few other minor effects on economy.

    I have two trailers, one a 7'wide cargo trailer 5,000lbs loaded. the other a 9,000lb 8' wide TT that is also about 2' taller. Difference in mileage over the same course is rather small. Towing the "big" one I get 10-12 depending on mountains or not. Towing the smaller one is 11-13, occasionally 14 on very flat ground on the interstate at constant speed. Roughly a 10% hit going from the small frontal area, low weight to the large frontal area and a big weight increase.

    also, to do a calculation of speed effects you REALLY need to know the Cd and actual frontal area. not a trival task, even a square wall trailer front has a Cd well below one, the longer the lower it is for the same frontal area, and some of the frontal area is blocked by the TV.

    The calculations shown by the OP show a mpg less than 1/2 of what I get pulling a 10,000 trailer with a 9,500 lb truck at 60ish.
  • This calculator is better than nothing but judging from the inputs other factors are not accounted for.
  • SplinterFL wrote:
    hddecker wrote:
    TT 11.5K#s, TV Ram 6.7L Cummins, TT 11.5' high towing at 65MPH over 18K miles, Fuel mileage, 11.75 MPG.


    The formula is conservitve, you should have a aerodyanic trailer. A semi is a flat wall (.6), and a 5th wheel has some curves (.5 or even .4).. so it's not perfect unless you put it in a wind-tunnel to know your true drag.

    11.5' did you remove 1 foot for road-clearance.

    10.5' * 7 wide= ~75ft
    Diesel=.3 eff or perhaps .4 with a turbo charger
    Lets say your tt has some good curves, 0.4 drag
    11.5k lbs weight, with .4 drag

    @65 MPH = 10.95 MPG (.3 engine) / 14.6 MPG (.4 engine)

    You'll have to tweak the numbers until it fits your rigs MPG, then change your weight and see how little it changes.


    Nope, it's like a great big brick, absolutely no aero to it at all. The front wall is almost straight up, might be 2-3 degrees off vertical.

    Doesn't the fact that the TT is up in the air actually increase drag. Seems to me that the NASCAR engineers work as had as they can to stop the air from getting under the car and create drag. A lot more semi trailers a being equipped with the side skirts, must have some thing to do with stopping aero drag.
  • hddecker wrote:
    TT 11.5K#s, TV Ram 6.7L Cummins, TT 11.5' high towing at 65MPH over 18K miles, Fuel mileage, 11.75 MPG.


    The formula is conservitve, you should have a aerodyanic trailer. A semi is a flat wall (.6), and a 5th wheel has some curves (.5 or even .4).. so it's not perfect unless you put it in a wind-tunnel to know your true drag.

    11.5' did you remove 1 foot for road-clearance.

    10.5' * 7 wide= ~75ft
    Diesel=.3 eff or perhaps .4 with a turbo charger
    Lets say your tt has some good curves, 0.4 drag
    11.5k lbs weight, with .4 drag

    @65 MPH = 10.95 MPG (.3 engine) / 14.6 MPG (.4 engine)

    You'll have to tweak the numbers until it fits your rigs MPG, then change your weight and see how little it changes.
  • My head hurts already, I can see the theories that this thread is going to generate. This formula might work well on paper, but there's too many variables in the real world that aren't factored in.

    According to your formula I am getting twice the fuel economy than I should. TT 11.5K#s, TV Ram 6.7L Cummins, TT 11.5' high towing at 65MPH over 18K miles, Fuel mileage, 11.75 MPG.