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Originally Posted by Minnie's Mate
Thanks for the advise Roger. I am not real familiar with diesels as this is only my second. My first didn't have the initial get up and go that this one does, but then it only had one turbo and not the twins that this one has. I know part of the loss of mileage is the particulate burner in the exhaust system and part of it is just the ULSD fuel. My first diesel was a 6.0 and tach'ed the same pulling the Airstream at 75 as it did at 55 because of the final shift point. I haven't towed as much with this one yet so I haven't found it's sweet spot.
Right after I bought this truck, I stored my Airstream in central Florida where all of our trips for the first half of the year would be so I wouldn't have to drag it over the same roads time and time again. This turns out to have saved about $100/trip over four trips plus one to two hours on each leg of each trip. We have a couple of rallies coming up here in Georgia plus the Labor Day Weekend at a nearby State Park so I brought it back after this last trip to have for those.
I have reservations about the programmers that are available on the aftermarket. I'm not familiar with replacement chips other than having seen motorhomes advertised with Banks chip sets along with Banks exhaust modifications and Banks air intake systems. I assume you can get new chips from Ford (?). I did ask the dealer's shop to update the programming several months ago and that seemed to raise my mileage from around 9.6 to 10.5 MPG's.
I have the 3.73 rear end...or at least that is what the paper work says and it is 2WD and not 4WD. With my first diesel truck I was getting between 19-20 MPG's on my daily commute (again 3.73 2WD). With this truck I get around 17. I figure I lost 2 MPG's both towing and non-towing. But my back sure appreciates the re-designed seats of this truck over those that were in my '05.
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Hi Minnies Mate,
I too am the proud owner of a new F250 Powerstroke. I too have the 3.73 rear end but I have the 6 speed manual gear box.
I can say, based on my own experience, that the Lie-O-Meter that calculates fuel mileage does not work worth a hoot.
I have recorded mileage and gallons purchased since we bought the truck new some 17,000+ miles ago last November. We've been across the country from Oregon to New Jersey, south to Florida then west to San Diego and north back to Oregon. NEVER (strong word) has the Lie-O-Meter come close to the computation of miles divided by gallons of fuel pumped into the tank.
The Lie-O-Meter ALWAYS tells me I am getting MORE MPG than the actual computations produce. That makes matters even worse if you are not happy with the fuel mileage.
I spent a lot of time hanging out on Ford Powerstroke forums learning as much as I could about the new Ford diesel prior to our purchase. From what I have read, I would be very reluctant to change anything associated with the emissions controls on these new vehicles. It has been stated by those who have changed the computer chips in their vehicles that Ford voided their power train warranty as soon as this was discovered.
Apparently the new vehicles do have the capability to record when a chip is taken out and/or put in. I understand that previous year models did not have this capability. It also notes that a non Ford chip was inserted.
The same is true for those who made changes to the exhaust.
So, I would be VERY conservative about making modifications of this nature. I have asked my local service department folks about doing changes of this nature and they have stated that the voiding of the power train warranty is a very real issue.
Apparently the EPA is very serious about ensuring that clean air wins. I could be wrong.
Jim
