ben_2_go
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2007
- Messages
- 399
- City
- Third rock from sun
- Vehicle Year
- 2001
- Engine
- 2.5 (4 Cylinder)
- Transmission
- Automatic
- Tire Size
- 235-75-R15
- My credo
- None at all.
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I think your year has a gear driven speedometer and odometer. If I’m correct, you need to change the gear to correct for the change in tire size. I don’t think you have to worry about the change in gear ratio, just the tires. So, that may be why your mpg is so low. The odometer is off and giving you a bad number to calculate your mpg.
Of course, that also means your speedometer is off and reading slower than you are actually traveling. If it is the factory gear for your original tires, that will be off by a large amount.
You could do math to figure out what the difference is between the old tire and the new one but that is a lot of work and the conversion would have to be done every time. Getting the correct gear, or at least one closer to being correct would be easier in the long run.
Going from the factory 29” tire to a 31” tire dropped my mpg by about 2-3. Yours is a bigger step but eric’s quote is probably more like what you should be seeing than the 12 you got.
I thought I’d share another one a Ricks Tips too.
I’m sure we’ve all used a spare battery with a couple wires hanging off it to test whatever. I like to keep a second deep-cycle marine battery in my vehicles that have the strobe lights and such for extra juice when I need it. But it also becomes my testing battery.
Instead of doing who knows what crazy things with tape and clamps or old battery connectors on the posts, I use the screw terminals. But I don’t use wing nuts or nuts.
I cut a small piece of the right size vacuum tube. I slip the stripped end of the wire into that little piece of vacuum tube, and then I slide it over the threaded terminal. It takes a second and I could pull it loose with one hand (for one of the thousand times I daydream and ground it to the wrong place).
View attachment 100270
I guess you could do it with a bigger diameter hose on the regular terminals too. I usually keep the tubing and the original delivery plastic caps on everything when I’m not using it, and then leave it on the trickle charger if it’s not in the truck.
Hope it helps…
You NEED a power probe...
I've stacked a 2x4 or 2x6 on edge on the bedside and then the toolbox on top to gain space beyween the box and floor.After finishing my rear bumper I noticed the rear suspension was sagging a good bit especially on the driver side. So I added 2 leafs back into the passenger side and 3 in the driver side which brought it up to level, except for the front pass corner which is an inch taller still. Might have to cut half a coil out up there.
Also got a new tool box that actually fit all my ropes, straps, spare fluids, parts, and tools! I dislike losing so much bed space with such a big box but it’s not as deep as some and there’s room to slide my paddle boardkayaks under it. Atleast until I get a bed rack I can put them on top of.
Also finally got a 2”ball/pintlehook combo which I’ve wanted for awhile. Unfortunately for some reason it was very long with the pin hole way in the back so it stuck out nearly 2’. Took a lot of drilling with a bunch of different sized bits but it fits much better now and I won’t have to remove the shackle hitch to swap in my 2” ball everytime I want to pull a trailer or vica versa.
Can't wait for the video report on this adventure.
Our rig for the day that Justin picked out… not crazy about a wildtrack