Lil bitHope you get feeling better James.... eyes are kinda important... lol
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Lil bitHope you get feeling better James.... eyes are kinda important... lol
Def get that checked out James!Just filled up with 2nd tank of Chevron 93. First tank was at 18% alcohol content and averaged 14.8 mpg with mixed driving. Refueled down south, same fuel, and headed home. After sixty some miles the alcohol content settled down to 7% and pulled into the driveway with an 18.5 mpg average. Highest ever. Truck was about 6900 pounds loaded.
Spent two days fooling with the tires after the tire store bungled the rotation. That busted bolt is starting to affect the wear pattern on the steer axle.
Still having trouble with my eyeballs, still hurts to look at the computer screen and my phone. Got to have the Doc check them out.
Good luck with that bolt.Finished that last tank of fuel and ran the same again. Both tanks, from different stations, same brand and octane have a 7% alcohol content. Ran a little mileage test on the highway for about ten miles, the truck got 19.2 mpg @ 70 mph and 24 mpg and then 22 mpg on two different roads at 40 mph.
It's too inconvenient to run Chevron's fuel around here, they are the highest price and the stations are few and far between. Will probably switch back to Mobil and run 1 or 2 tanks of each octane rating and see what the mileage differences are. My daughter is doing the same with her little Kia and is fueling about 3X more often. That little car did really well on BPs 87 octane, so she'll test 89 and 93 from that brand and note the difference, if any too.
Then again, maybe not! I'll run mileage tests on this tank and do a data log for BlackBear and put her back on E85. It's about $.04 less per mile around here.
Anyhow, the truck averaged 14+ mpg on both of the last two tanks of Chevron's 93. The second included hours of idling, there were 4.5 hours more on that tank than the last. Every time my wife drives the truck lately, the memory seats don't work, throw codes for a seat motor sensor out of alignment or something. I'll have to clear it again and see what's going on.
My wife and Pete's went to the same driving school, she's equally adept at tanking the mileage! After coaxing it back up to 15 mpg with all that idling, she went shopping and came back with the light on and back to 14.1.
Well that's enough of useless random thoughts. Felt great to be back in Sunday School and Morning Service though I missed the Evening Service. After seeing the doctor in the morning I'll take the truck over to my buddy's barn and get that busted bolt out of the frame. Sayonara!
AAM, American Axle and Manufacturing. Came across their website looking to compile parts lists for my differentials. A few days later I see their stickers on my driveshafts and learn that they were the OE supplier for the differentials and driveshafts. The front driveshaft can be purchased new, u-joints, yokes and all for $175. Interesting stuff.
Sounds like an adventure.Took my girls into the woods where I used to hunt. KO2s pretty much negated the need for 4WD until we were faced with crossing a stream in a swamp. My kids tossed rocks into the water and said they could see them on the bottom. I kept asking about the black section and the elder of the two said she could see the bottom and her rock. A tracked vehicle had recently gone through this way so the kids hopped back in and I put the truck in 4HI.
Moved out cautiously but not too slow to get stuck, into the water she went, going good and the front end nose dives, water washes over the hood and onto the windshield! I hit the brakes and move the shifter so fast I stuck her in park and not reverse! Heart racing, my wallet is crying and I try to put her into reverse and jam the selector down into M5, screw it, and floor it, not knowing whether or not it was a good idea! The tires dug in and the nose came up and the truck powered right up and out of that crossing like nobody's business! Thank you Lord and GM Arlington!
I'm shaking, cussing, sorry Lord, and now on a 6 foot wide trail with a 7 foot wide truck. Warnings start buzzing, my daughter left her seatbelt off, whew! A message pops up on the DIC to check my trailer wiring! Motor a little shaky for a moment and then resumes purring like a kitten. Took about a mile of being beaten with branches to turn around. Kept going past where we sank and found a better crossing to get back to the main grade and over to my favorite campground to unwind and have some breakfast, heart still racing, hands still shaking.
My youngest was sitting next to me and her first thought when we nose dived was that the shovel we brought along was not going to save us! LOL
Before and After:
View attachment 204956 View attachment 204957
Time for a lift!
Driving with your engine in its ideal power band sweet spot makes a big difference in mileage as well.
In general there is an ideal place where the power output of HP and torque is ideal at the right rpm that will produce the best fuel economy for the gearing you have and tire sizing you had. I had always thought it was the speed limit of the highway system at the time of manufacturing. So if i made changes to gearing or tire size the goal was to still maintain the same tire revs per mile along with the same engine rpm therefore maintaining the ideal mileage ability for the speed limit. maybe that explains it. Or maybe that is useless info as well.
Why is the mileage falling away so sharply at 70 MPH compared with 65 MPH? I cannot put my finger on it. A worn bearing on an accessory? There was a noise last month that we heard twice but has not returned. No misfires, no leaks, fuel pressure is fine, all temperatures are fine.
Speaking of temperatures. Spent a little over 6 hours behind the wheel today. First leg was to pick up my daughter from school. Paid attention to temps more closely but left note pad in the truck. Highest speed was 45, most of the time spent a 35 mph. Highest ECT was 196, highest EOT was 210, highest TOT was 180. Next leg after this tanked the mileage during rush hour stop and go and temps all peaked slightly higher. Mileage went from mid 14s to mid 12s.
Hit the highway and she would not deliver better than mid 14s @ 70 MPH for while. Then she crept up to 16. At 75 MPH the EOT was in the low 220s. More idling, city driving and then back on the highway for the return leg. MPGs averaged 18.6 @ 70, still low but better than earlier. ECT was solid at 192, EOT didn't budge off 217 and the trans was it's usual self, in the 150s, I'm forgetting already.
The reason for such attention to the temps is that I am considering installing a lower temp thermostat in order to run a lower viscosity oil, like 0W30 or 0W20. And the reason for that is to gain in highway MPGs but not at the expense of durability or reliability.
It was hot and humid out today, the truck acted like my old Buick's on such a day, no power. My daughter said the same thing about her little Kia. Temps said high 80s and 91 or 92 but maybe it was the humidity.
The idiot light is on and this tank is done. Switching off Chevron for Mobil. It's less expensive and more widely available around here. After a tank or two I might switch to 89/91 and see how she runs on that. I miss E85 though, just not the short legs.
Last 4 runs at 65 mph were 20.2, 20.4, 18.9 and 20.2. For of you in Rio Linda that's an average of 19.9 mpg.
Last six recorded runs at 70 mph were 18.5, 17.2, 17.8, 18.5, 18.1 and 18.6. Average of 18.1
The difference in MPG between 40 and 45 is 1.6.
The difference in MPG between 45 and 50 is .2.
The difference in MPG between 50 and 55 is .4.
The difference in MPG between 55 and 60 is .4.
The difference in MPG between 60 and 65 is .9.
The difference in MPG between 65 and 70 is 1.8.
The difference in MPG between 70 and 75 is 1.0.
The difference in MPG between 75 and 80 is 1.8.
What say y'all?
@BlackBearPerf