Try to not idle the truck
Do not be flat to the floor gung ho if you have a govenor
Do not be pedaling the throttle going down the road, find a way to set your foot on the pedal where you can comfortably hold that position and not be constantly in and out of the throttle.
choice C: Braking all of a sudden, or putting the petal to the metal, Will kill you're fuel mileage. Yeah but hammering down at the green light in an 18wheeler Won't get you too far Lol.
Choice D: All of the above. =X.
Keep on Running (good song) and of course :moose: (the moose) =X
You guys forgot the thing that effects fuel economy the most..
Check you tire pressures often! Every time you change trailers is a good time to check the pressures. High speeds are bad and idling is a complete waste.
You guys forgot the thing that effects fuel economy the most..
Check you tire pressures often! Every time you change trailers is a good time to check the pressures. High speeds are bad and idling is a complete waste.
Foz, that's because he had already mentioned that:
Quote: We'll assume that the tires are properly inflated and the truck is well maintained.
If my Coffee deprived mind remebers right, there is some help the Kenworth site as far as reducing air drag. Mostly dealing with aerodynamics such as mentioned before. The reduction of the tractor to trailer space, also the sleeper setup.
I once read an interesting tale of finding the "SWEET" spot on the truck. Not every truck is going to get max fuel economy at 55, in this case the guy tried running 55 out to the west coast and then compared it to running 68 mph. The result was he got BETTER fuel mileage at 68 in HIS truck due to the way it was set up.
There have been a lot of stories on XM's trucking channel on the subject, I'm too lazy to look right now, I need COFFEE !!!!!