Jan-21-2020 06:48 PM
Jan-28-2020 01:38 PM
Jan-27-2020 12:11 PM
Jan-27-2020 07:55 AM
Jan-24-2020 06:57 PM
noteven wrote:
For the best fuel economy per ton/mile you need a high compression long stroke turbo supercharged engine that has in cylinder multi-injection of a high power density fuel... like big trucks use...
Adding more overdrive trans ratios in front of salt flats axle ratios doesn’t do much for tow performance but works great for no load driving.
Jan-24-2020 06:47 AM
Jan-24-2020 04:22 AM
dodge guy wrote:FloridaRosebud wrote:GDS-3950BH wrote:
Why would anyone expect an engine, although newer, with 2 less cylinders but a larger displacement, to get noticeably better fuel efficiency? Especially so in something with the aerodynamics of a brick like a heavy motorhome. No such thing as a free lunch.
Yeah, that was kind of my thought as well. I had a chevy 454 in a 3500 Savanna Van back a few years ago, and my gas mileage never was above 10mpg. It went down to 7-8 when I was towing my 12,000 pound trailer. There is no free lunch. As someone in an earlier post said, good gas mileage and RV should never be used in the same sentence.
Al
It's called technology. Replacing a 20 year old motor with something new should get better mileage. Just like when the V-10 replaced the 460, more power and better mileage. Otherwise all it is, is a new motor with nothing to be said for it.
Hopefully we get some real world reports and not some information from a couple guys I wouldn't trust driving a pedal car.
Jan-24-2020 03:54 AM
FloridaRosebud wrote:GDS-3950BH wrote:
Why would anyone expect an engine, although newer, with 2 less cylinders but a larger displacement, to get noticeably better fuel efficiency? Especially so in something with the aerodynamics of a brick like a heavy motorhome. No such thing as a free lunch.
Yeah, that was kind of my thought as well. I had a chevy 454 in a 3500 Savanna Van back a few years ago, and my gas mileage never was above 10mpg. It went down to 7-8 when I was towing my 12,000 pound trailer. There is no free lunch. As someone in an earlier post said, good gas mileage and RV should never be used in the same sentence.
Al
Jan-24-2020 02:19 AM
GDS-3950BH wrote:
Why would anyone expect an engine, although newer, with 2 less cylinders but a larger displacement, to get noticeably better fuel efficiency? Especially so in something with the aerodynamics of a brick like a heavy motorhome. No such thing as a free lunch.
Jan-23-2020 10:49 PM
Jan-23-2020 12:25 PM
Jan-23-2020 05:53 AM
Bionic Man wrote:
Sometimes I just shake my head on these. I know there is no perfect test, but you should at least test under the same conditions. Which they didn't. They mention a couple times on the video that they were fighting the wind when they were with trailer in the Ford.
Also, I'm not sure they are even using the same test track. The towing test are on I76 east. That non-towing trip with the Ford wasn't on that stretch of road - it is on the diagonal from Longmont to Boulder - not an interstate, there is more traffic and stop lights. Is that the same road they used for the unloaded Chevy test?
Not defending the 7.3 blindly, but we really need to get some real-world test results before anyone makes a judgment, good or bad, about the MPG of the 7.3.
Jan-22-2020 01:32 PM
Jan-22-2020 01:28 PM
noteven wrote:
7.3 V8 gudzilla EcoBoost 600hp!!
Jan-22-2020 12:23 PM
timmac wrote:
Yes it is a fast mpg test and not a long run test but it does show that the 7.3 is still a gas hog, even if it was a better day and driving longer still appears it wont break the 7 mpg range.