differential gear change

hey, wondering if there is a mathematical formula somewhere where i could compare a possible mpg savings by changing out the 4.10 differential gears for a

3.73 (or lower) gears.

b.w.

Reply to
William Wixon
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Check out this link for a axle ratio and tire size calculator

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Reply to
TheSnoMan

On Sun, 22 Jan 2006 07:24:09 GMT, "William Wixon" snipped-for-privacy@frontiernet.net wrote:

You don't say what you are working with but, changing to a taller differential does not always improve fuel economy. If you take the engine below an efficient operating speed such that it has to work harder, you may use more fuel with a 3.73 gear. I have an F150 w/5.0 and 3.55 that gets both better mileage and performance that it's near identically equipped predecessor that had a 3.08. Several years ago, we had a 'yota 4x4 that was in the 11mpg range with 31x10.50's and a corrected speedometer. We change it to 4.56 gears and corrected the speedometer because of the performance. The fuel mileage was immediately back the the 16-17 mpg range. The idea is to keep the engine in an efficient operating range for you driving needs. IOW, if you are not using it for much hauling or towing, you may realize an improvement. Mathematically, you should see about a 9% improvement in fuel economy. If you vehicle is now getting 16 mpg, that would translate to about 17.4. With gas at about $2.25/gal, you would save about $0.20/gal. after the change. Your caost to swap a gear if you cannot do it yourself will be at least $400. which means you will reach the financial breakeven point at 2000 gal gasoline or about 34,800 miles at the new improved MPG - assumming you actually get the mathematical projections. All that time, you truck will not be performaing as it does now. I hardy see how it could be worth the effort in the long run.

You numbers may vary greatly since I have based my figures on what I would expect to get with an F150 4x2 in pretty much standard config. You may want run some number that more closely relate to your vehicle.

Lugnut

Reply to
lugnut

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