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so the above is suggesting that an all wheel driver ranger with the 2.7 engine will get better gas mileage than the
2.3 with 2wd....um i don't think so sir
2.3 with 2wd....um i don't think so sir
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I usually squeeze out better city economy, but otherwise my numbers are close to yours. Sometimes I'm able to go notably farther for highway fuel economy, too. My last 1600mi road trip was about 27.5mpg and my best was over 29mpg over the course of even more miles.I've followed that thread and it bugs me how terrible they think the current Ranger's mpgs are. I know it's dependent on how a ranger is equipped and your driving style, but you can't complain about the vehicle getting 15mpg when you lift the truck and put massive offroad tires on it. I get 20 in the city and 26.5 on the highway. The only time I drop below 19-20 during a fuel tank cycle is when I sit in my car for a dinner or two during that week.
I'm looking forward to see what the 2.7 economy is, but I'm pretty happy with the fuel economy of the 5G considering it's only a couple hundred pounds less than the F150.
I don't measure with every fill but have let the MPG calculation remain since buying the Ranger brand new. This past Summer, I was at 26.6 overall miles (35K), but this winter was cold, very cold and it took me down to 23.8MPG, so your observation about cold affecting milage is correct). Now that it is getting nicer, I am back up to 24.2MPG but the dealer hurt me as they went through a 1/4 tank of gas testing the climate control replacement. I am not sure I drive enough to get it back to the 26s but we will see.I average between 24-26mpg - I calculate manually with every fill-up. I have noticed it gets a bit lower when the temps are in the 40's-50's, but in Florida that's not a big issue - only a few months per year.
Another factor is the different blends of gasoline where the winter blend gives you less miles per gallon.I don't measure with every fill but have let the MPG calculation remain since buying the Ranger brand new. This past Summer, I was at 26.6 overall miles (35K), but this winter was cold, very cold and it took me down to 23.8MPG, so you observation about cold affecting milage is correct). Now that it is getting nicer, I am back up to 24.2MPG but the dealer hurt me as they went through a 1/4 tank of gas testing the climate control replacement. I am not sure I drive enough to get it back to the 26s but we will see.
I thought the same thing but one year we had a refinery issue, and the winter gas came out late but as it got colder, I still noticed a dramatic drop. I also wondered if it is just not the cost of warming the vehicle up. However, on mine you can watch your MPG as you drive and the same hill in the winters shows a lot more under 5MPG times than in the summer which almost never goes under 15MPG. Just my observations and not sure if this is all cars or just the Rangers.Another factor is the different blends of gasoline where the winter blend gives you less miles per gallon.
He's a beekeeper, what do you expect?Did you really just title the thread with a link?