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Need a big truck to tow? Nope!
This weekend, I attended the MREA Energy Fair.
I drove up there in my Chevy S-10 pickup truck. It's the absolute, no-frills, base model: two-wheel drive, regular cab, short bed, 4-cylinder engine. I used the truck to tow my Electric Geo Metro, and had my electric motorcycle and camping gear in the bed of the truck. Both electric vehicles run on lead-acid batteries, and neither is a feather-weight. The thing is, I CAN tow the car AND carry the cycle behind my beater econo-truck. The engine is big enough, the suspension is good enough. Granted, it didn't have great acceleration, and there were hills that I couldn't break 55 while going up, but under normal use, I get better than 30mpg! While I was at the energy fair, I joked with someone that in my truck, even towing and with all the additional weight, it still got better fuel economy than a Hummer. But that got me thinking. Did I really? What DID I get for fuel economy? My truck is a '95, so I can't use a ScanGauge on it. I just have to fill the tank up all the way and divide by the miles on the trip odometer. I seldom actually fill the tank all the way up, because I have a small leak in the tank at the very top of it. Since I knew I was going to have a long out-of-town trip tomorrow anyways, filling the tank all the way up seemed to have merit. I looked up on Fuel Economy what the EPA rating is on the current Hummer. Turns out that a 2010 H3 is rated at 18 MPG/HWY. I also looked at a couple of other vehicles that people commonly think are required for towing. The Suburban (two-wheel drive version, let's be fair here) gets 21 MPG/HWY. The most fuel efficient version of "The Truck", the Chevy Silverado, is the 2-wheel drive Silverado Hybrid, which gets 22 MPG/HWY. So what was my fuel economy with my little truck pulling two extra vehicles? 24.52 MPG. All jokes aside, I REALLY DID get better gas mileage than a Hummer does all by itself! |
That's pretty good... was the Geo on a trailer or dolly or perhaps just a towbar? I once used my BMW 528e to tow another car attached via towbar and got 23mpg which seemed pretty good considering it only gets 27 by itself.
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I had the same thing happen last year with my Commuti-car, hauling it to the energy fair on a trailer, I think I got 26mpg, but of course my car is lighter and I didn't have a motorcycle with me, but I did have the car on a trailer behind a Ford Ranger.
Towing is why I miss having a trailer hitch on my Civic VX, my old VX had a hitch, I used up an entire tank of gas hauling lumber, dry wall, lead acid batteries, all things I would have used a truck for and got 39.9mpg with that trailer behind my car doing truck like things. |
Yeah, I just tow the Metro with a tow bar. The car has tabs welded on the front of it.
Trucks are great if you use them as trucks. You'd be amazed at what a hatchback can do though. Oh wait. This is Ecomodder.... You guys already know that. Anyways, I guess my point it that is typically best to have a vehicle that meets more to your minimal side than the overpowered/overly expensive side. |
That also makes the argument that, if you have a large truck, it would almost be more economical to save the miles and the fuel on the big truck by purchasing a dirt cheap bare bones econotruck to do your day to day business and save your monster for when you need to haul gigantic loads.
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Or buy what fills your needs and rent the monster when you need it with the money you save by not having separate insurance and regestration costs.
In the 11.5 years I have owned my pickup I have only needed a bigger one once. |
:thumbup: Doing better than most sedans while driving three vehicles at once :p
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Great job with the pulling Ben! |
I don't think I beat your MPG, when doing something very similar, but I bet I still beat the H3.
My last fill up got 24.7, back then though I was averaging over 26. A friends pickup died on a camping trip 75-100 miles from home. We didn't care about mileage as long as we got everything home safe before sunset, my state doesn't reqire lights on trailers during daylight hours. |
Not too shabby!
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