Get yourself a scangauge. Be sure to calibrate it based on percent difference of it and your fuel ups on paper.
Then there's no guessing. I track my tank avg and my avg per load.
It also reads engine and abs codes. Costs $200 but just the code reading has paid for itself 3 or 4 times.
Gas Milage
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Felicia1973, Jul 7, 2014.
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way too many variables. -
i'll take that 75G in revenue over that 15G in fuel savings. ANY YEAR. -
rockyroad74 Thanks this.
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How much of that $75k is net?
Fuel saved is pure profit! Even if the difference is a wash, you're working harder to clear the same money. -
gpsman and rockyroad74 Thank this.
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Here's another thought.
Why does it have to be either all this or all that? If I can clearly net a chunk of money more by driving 75, heck, I'm hammered down. However, if I can gross $1600 and clear $1200 of that 300mile run; why drive 75 when 50 will get the job done?
Besides, where I make that kind of money you aren't driving 70 for long before the traffic slows you down. The speed limits are often 55 to 65 anyway. You won't haul more freight with a faster speed most times. So why burn away profit?Flatbedn, Lepton1, RAGIN CAJUN and 2 others Thank this. -
We're assuming someone will average 70 mph and run exactly 11 hours every day and someone else will average 55 and a full 11 also. I'd love that perfect world.
The number I need help with is the 15k in extra fuel though. AT 4 bucks a gallon and 10 mpg you're looking at 40 cents a mile for fuel. 40 cents a mile times an extra 37500 miles is 15k. So at 4 bucks a gallon is the guy doing 55 and the guy doing 70 are both getting 10 mpg I come up with 15k difference in fuel cost for the year.
Now, what's the real cost per mile for fuel at 55 and at 70?
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