Here is the problem, 0W20 went out of my engine at 544 miles and I do not have any screen shots from this point in time. I also have had the Auto Stop/Start and DFM disabled since 275 miles.
The 20.8 MPG was also with 3 adults and a fairly packed cargo section. The route I took was fairly flat with some decline in altitude because I ended up at Sea Level, so there clearly is an advantage due to the terrain. It is also a function on how aggressively I drive with my right foot and how many trucks and rolling roadblocks I need to dispatch.
The EPA Highway rating of my 6000 brick is 18 MPG, 14 MPG City and 16 MPG Combined.
Assuming 2 MPG hit for 0W40 oil and disabling the Auto Stop/Start and DFM, I guess I should be getting close to 26 MPG on the highway based on the way some people think around here. Not going to happen in one of these vehicles.
There is absolutely NO 2 MPG hit running 0W40 vs 0W20, might be 0.1-0.2 MPG at the highest. Someone here posted this 2 MPG non-sense, they just pulled that number out of their backside.
The EPA and manufacturers would have been running 0W20 25 years ago it they could get 2 MPG with just a oil viscosity change.
Not sure where people dream up these ideas.
I really do not care what my fuel economy is, I am not trying to for the highest fuel economy, I am trying to get my engine to last more than 50k miles. Durability and reliability is far more of a concern that what is spent on fuel. Regardless of what I drive with an ICE power plant, I will be spending money on fuel.
Here is a shot of me Hypermiling in town with a slight decline in grade going no faster than 45 MPH. 9 minutes, distance 4.9 miles. This truely was a bit of Hypermiling because I was spending a fair amount of time in DFCO (Decel with Fuel Cut Off). 24 MPG, gotta love this, but the moment I need to climb a grade, this story is over!
View attachment 457837