No special points made here, just thinking out loud.
An acquaintance recently told me he replaced the ring gear in one of his trucks to change his rear axle ratio. The change was intended to improve the truck's fuel economy. This was a recent change and he had no new mpg numbers to report. He did say gradability (hill climbing power) was not significantly affected, though he had not run the truck in mountains yet.
My dealer tells me a ratio change on our truck would cost about $3,000 if remanufactured ring gears are used (not junk yard, not new).
At present, we are running a 3.42 rear axle ratio, which the computer says provides a fuel economy sweet spot range of 61.0-70.2 mph, and 1,482 rpm at 65 mph. On the road, that rpm number is pretty much what the computer says it is. At 65 mpg we are running just a tad under 1,500 rpm.
The next step down for us is ring gears (tandem drive axles) that would provide a 3.21 rear axle ratio, with a sweet spot range of 65.0-74.0 mpg and 1,391 rpm at 65 mph.
Depending on wind and terrain, we get between 9.0 and 9.5 mpg at 65 mph now (worse when wind and terrain are extreme but in that range over long distances).
In repsonse to fuel at $4.00+, we have changed our driving practices and improved our mpg by 0.5. Part of that is reducing our over the road driving speed from 65 mph to 60 mph.
Thinking out loud, I am wondering, what good if any it might do to change our rear axle ratio from 3.42 to 3.21?
An acquaintance recently told me he replaced the ring gear in one of his trucks to change his rear axle ratio. The change was intended to improve the truck's fuel economy. This was a recent change and he had no new mpg numbers to report. He did say gradability (hill climbing power) was not significantly affected, though he had not run the truck in mountains yet.
My dealer tells me a ratio change on our truck would cost about $3,000 if remanufactured ring gears are used (not junk yard, not new).
At present, we are running a 3.42 rear axle ratio, which the computer says provides a fuel economy sweet spot range of 61.0-70.2 mph, and 1,482 rpm at 65 mph. On the road, that rpm number is pretty much what the computer says it is. At 65 mpg we are running just a tad under 1,500 rpm.
The next step down for us is ring gears (tandem drive axles) that would provide a 3.21 rear axle ratio, with a sweet spot range of 65.0-74.0 mpg and 1,391 rpm at 65 mph.
Depending on wind and terrain, we get between 9.0 and 9.5 mpg at 65 mph now (worse when wind and terrain are extreme but in that range over long distances).
In repsonse to fuel at $4.00+, we have changed our driving practices and improved our mpg by 0.5. Part of that is reducing our over the road driving speed from 65 mph to 60 mph.
Thinking out loud, I am wondering, what good if any it might do to change our rear axle ratio from 3.42 to 3.21?