โMar-10-2016 09:57 AM
โMar-16-2016 10:52 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
Ok, I was out in the motorhome today but was only able to drive 55 mph. It was a short trip and traffic was heavy and it was very windy not to our advantage.
So, at 55 mph I'm running 1,200 RPM's in 6th gear.
MM.
โMar-15-2016 08:27 PM
โMar-14-2016 09:21 PM
โMar-12-2016 12:06 PM
wolfe10 wrote:
Reality is the "best MPG speed" varies with coach, gearing and terrain.
On flat ground, the lowest RPM you can hold high gear is the best "reasonable" speed. That will be right at peak torque RPM for your diesel.
When I say "reasonable" in most coaches peak torque RPM in 5th gear (MUCH less aerodynamic drag at lower speed) will give better MPG, but is excruciatingly slow!
But, that speed (peak torque RPM, 6th gear) in rolling hills will cause a downshift on each hill-- so a little higher speed that will allow you to stay in high gear is better.
โMar-11-2016 04:58 PM
โMar-11-2016 04:39 PM
DSDP Don wrote:
I know technically, the sweet spot my be described in torque, horsepower and mpg numbers, but I've always felt there was a speed where a particular coach settled in and seemed to want to run.
On my 1990 Class C, it was 63 mpg. On my 05 Diplomat, it was 58. On my current coach, we often run about 60, because others we travel with like that speed, but 63 mph is where it settles in. I think it's different for every coach.
โMar-11-2016 03:20 PM
โMar-11-2016 01:56 PM
Mr.Mark wrote:tinkerer wrote:
A lot depends on head winds, but with my C7 Cat it seems that 72 mph is it's sweet spot as it will cruise over the hills with not downshifting especially when I run in the economy mode on the transmission,That is around 2000 rpms.
Tinkerer, are towing when you are going 72 mph?
MM.
24 ft car trailer with a Honda CRV and Polaris trailer. If the ground is more level I like to cruise at 65. If I am bucking a strong headwind it might be 55. I like to see my turbo boost 25 or less when crusing.
โMar-11-2016 07:24 AM
Crespro wrote:wolfe10 wrote:
Reality is the "best MPG speed" varies with coach, gearing and terrain.
On flat ground, the lowest RPM you can hold high gear is the best "reasonable" speed. That will be right at peak torque RPM for your diesel.
When I say "reasonable" in most coaches peak torque RPM in 5th gear (MUCH less aerodynamic drag at lower speed) will give better MPG, but is excruciatingly slow!
But, that speed (peak torque RPM, 6th gear) in rolling hills will cause a downshift on each hill-- so a little higher speed that will allow you to stay in high gear is better.
Good question -- max torque first, then top gear, then sufficient kinetic energy to top the hills at your chosen minimum speed (I prefer 50 mph). On fairly flat terrain, that is 65 mph for me. If there are major hills, it is 68 to 70 mph.
Most of my driving is at 65 mph. But with 400 HP and 1200 ft-lbs of torque pulling 36,000# (coach with Enclave), I probably have slightly more power to weight ratio than many on this list.
Mr. Mark, your Volvo and Prevost are quite heavy in proportion to both HP and torque. I suspect you may be 2 mph higher than me based upon those parameters.
โMar-11-2016 06:55 AM
โMar-11-2016 04:55 AM
โMar-10-2016 08:30 PM
wolfe10 wrote:
Reality is the "best MPG speed" varies with coach, gearing and terrain.
On flat ground, the lowest RPM you can hold high gear is the best "reasonable" speed. That will be right at peak torque RPM for your diesel.
When I say "reasonable" in most coaches peak torque RPM in 5th gear (MUCH less aerodynamic drag at lower speed) will give better MPG, but is excruciatingly slow!
But, that speed (peak torque RPM, 6th gear) in rolling hills will cause a downshift on each hill-- so a little higher speed that will allow you to stay in high gear is better.
โMar-10-2016 07:42 PM
tinkerer wrote:
A lot depends on head winds, but with my C7 Cat it seems that 72 mph is it's sweet spot as it will cruise over the hills with not downshifting especially when I run in the economy mode on the transmission,That is around 2000 rpms.
โMar-10-2016 07:18 PM