FORDF250HDXLT
The life of an Indian is like the wings of the air
I'm trying to get a grip on the thought process here.
Are you using the amount pumped in each fuel ticket as the basis?
When I'm riding the bike I use the range on a full tank ,because I don't have a gas gauge !which is pretty critical knowing how far I can get on the bike without running out of gas in the middle of nowhere so I fuel it the same way each time makes it easier to calculate .It would be interesting to see if there's an alternate method for the truck due to foaming and air purging.
it's very simple.
if your fill ups are consecutive,the only discrepancy can be your first and final fill up because all the fill ups in between will be corrected by the next.
example;
you first fill up a 10 gallon tank with 10 gallons and reset your odo.
you drive 100 miles and you write down your mileage.
you fill up with 10 gallons again and notice you just got 10 mpg.reset the odo.
you drive 100 miles and you write down your mileage.
you fill up again,this time with 8 gallons (for some reason you used a big rig nozzle and it foamed bad or whatever.didn't actually fill anyway) and reset your odo.you look and think you just got 12.5 mpg and reset your odo.
you drive 60 miles this time because you notice your nearing E sooner.when you fill up it takes 7.5 gallons here and you see it looks like you just got 7.5 mpg here.however all it did was correct the last tanks fill up error.
notice in either of the last cases you know your truck didn't get 12.5 mpg nor 7.5 mpg but if you average them out,they corrected the true average for 10 mpg see?
these variances can be any amount.any fill up error possible.so long as you do two things:
1.record the mileage correctly each time and
2.fill up consecutively.
no matter what fill up errors you get in between your first and final tank,the end result will be a 100% true average.
the more consecutive fill ups you calculate,the more variances in road conditions,ambient temps,driving style,city traffic,etc.etc.etc.
a single tank or two means very,very,very little.all you care about is the average.this will be what your trucks mpg is and with calculating consecutively you don't have a care or worry in the world how much fuel actually goes into each fill up because it just wont matter.
and to add to this just a touch more,if you get 40-50 consecutive tanks or so,your pretty much going to bury the small discrepancy of your first and final fill up too,so that even those tanks might only change the overall average by .0253 or something.
Last edited:
at flawed.logic