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When you take your foot off the throttle, the carburettor / injectors / fuel pump on a diesel return to the throttle opening that corresponds to tickover.
I have a suspicion that most people, if they think are going to come to a complete stop, either disengage the clutch, or stick it in neutral (except during their driving test, of course.)
Good point PC. So that would mean you might do slightly better if you do stay in gear. Mind you, if you are going to stay in gear, you have to keep changing down if you don't want to stall the engine.
Of course, since your truck falls into the good-for-towing category of vehicle that you Yanks are so keen on I guess the more gears the better
It's Ford Ranger! (I think they have them in the UK too). I had a four-banger Ranger, and it couldn't pull the skin off a rice pudding. It could barely tow my little tin boat.
I'm also having range problems. I was getting 35-40 miles this summer. But, this winter, the range seems to be plummeting to under 20 miles
If ewe turn the engine off then this helps to save fuel too whilst coasting !..........which is nice !
200 amps; that's a serious current - surely that's not maintained during steady speed...?
I'm also having range problems. I was getting 35-40 miles this summer. But, this winter, the range seems to be plummeting to under 20 miles []
What you need is some nice low-value fuel (in terms of capacity to do useful work at cost) that is onboard simply to warm the batteries and the cabin.
I hate to think what the covering might be made of.
Quote from: Geezer on 07/01/2012 07:03:13Good point PC. So that would mean you might do slightly better if you do stay in gear. Mind you, if you are going to stay in gear, you have to keep changing down if you don't want to stall the engine.Correct - it should be possible to return a very slight improvement in MPG if staying in gear, but as you infer there is a fairly limited rev range that this will mode support.