True. Didn’t think about the weight.The new tires could be 3,4 pounds heavier.
That would do it.
Every pound of rotational mass effect equals two pounds of static mass.
Electric motors would be affected by this.
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True. Didn’t think about the weight.The new tires could be 3,4 pounds heavier.
That would do it.
Every pound of rotational mass effect equals two pounds of static mass.
Electric motors would be affected by this.
Manufacturers choose the lightest ties when they can so they can show better mpg’s.True. Didn’t think about the weight.
I just checked the defender 2 is 27.8 lbs. If I remember correctly the oem conti's were 24 lbs.True. Didn’t think about the weight.
I just checked the defender 2 is 27.8 lbs. If I remember correctly the oem conti's were 24 lbs.
Agreed the weight will affect MPGs.The new tires could be 3,4 pounds heavier.
That would do it.
Every pound of rotational mass effect equals two pounds of static mass.
Electric motors would be affected by this.
For my specific case you would need to calculate the increase in rolling resistance from the tread and the increased size.Agreed the weight will affect MPGs.
The typical rule I've seen is 1 pound unsprung = 10 pounds sprung weight of impact.
100 pounds of additional weight is said to be apprx equal to about a 1% MPG reduction.
4 pounds heavier per wheel x 4 wheels x 10 impact factor = 160 pound effect or 1.6% MPG decrease.
For the example noted by @710-oil-614 the 8 pound addition would equate to 320 pound load net.
That would be a 3.3% mpg reduction, and he noted a decrease substantially larger than that.
Of course, there are a lot of other factors that influence MPGs, especially temperatures where a hybrid suffers in battery and decrease and Atkinson increase to support heating the cab etc...
Wow - That's a significant hit.In the end - going from Territory HT to 235 Wildpeak AT has cost me at least 10% in efficiency. The numbers above support than as do my hand calculated MPGs since putting them on.
It has and I’m down around 20% total from summer months so the 10% I am attributing to it is not due to the cold.Wow - That's a significant hit.
I was planning on going to the WildPeaks as I really like them on another vehicle.
Has your mpg calculations mostly been in cold weather as well?
Yeah, I’m surprised that it’s that much difference. I’ll have to look at the weight over stock when looking for new tires also.I just checked the defender 2 is 27.8 lbs. If I remember correctly the oem conti's were 24 lbs.
Look at the Continental true contact tour 54 good for weight, rolling resistance, wet and light snow, 70-80k milage, even have 225&235/55 R19 for $219 at discount.Yeah, I’m surprised that it’s that much difference. I’ll have to look at the weight over stock when looking for new tires also.![]()
Might try this…I ride until near empty then add 2 gallons higher octane, and fill up with lower grade…That extra octane gives me pretty consistent 42-43 mpg. But recent Michilens Defender tires dropped my MPG by 2 to 3 mpg…Pretty sure it was the tall tread and tread pattern creating wind resistance. Tire weight was close to the same.So what I've found with my '23 is that repeated short trips (<5 miles) will kill the gas mileage. I thought I was going to see my MPG jump living just 3 miles from work with max speed of 30 mph, but the reality is the ICE needs to kick on a lot more often to boost the hybrid battery (averaging about 36-38, down from 41-42 when my commute was around 15 miles each way). Speeds over 45 mph kill the gas mileage - not enough power to regularly maintain 45+ in electric only. Cold temps hurt gas mileage since the ICE needs to run more to warm up. Just driving in "Normal" hurts because the braking profile in normal jumps almost instantly to max regen + brakes whereas "Slippery" and "Eco" modes give me a lot more control over regen application.
There's a lot of factors that go into how this truck handles the MPG. While it's only upper 30's for me right now, I'm still averaging double what I'd get in a full size pickup so whatever, I'm happy with it.
Tread and height would create more rolling resistance than wind resistance.Might try this…I ride until near empty then add 2 gallons higher octane, and fill up with lower grade…That extra octane gives me pretty consistent 42-43 mpg. But recent Michilens Defender tires dropped my MPG by 2 to 3 mpg…Pretty sure it was the tall tread and tread pattern creating wind resistance. Tire weight was close to the same.