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2022 XLT Hybrid has no "Lifetime" MPG value stored.
(Your truck probably does not either.)
You can "reset to zero" your trip odometer and MPG info whenever you want. But what happens if you never press reset?
Others have shown the miles only tally up to 9999 then roll over to zero.
The MPG value does not "roll over" but it only holds the most recent 2500 miles of fuel data.
Data is "FIFO". First In - First Out. The oldest data is overwritten as you drive beyond 2500 miles. It is a "rolling average" not a true lifetime average (unless you have gone fewer than 2500 miles total).
Case Studied:
I drove 8427 miles on 210 gallons. (1000 of that was towing). This is 40.1 MPG true lifetime. But my "never reset meter" was displaying 47 MPG, because none of the towing was in the past 2500 miles and I have a very gentle commute route.
Then, at 8427 miles I towed a big trailer from California to Alaska and return. On this long towing trip, I got 18 MPG on paper, and my "never reset trip meter" displayed 19.0 MPG.
My true "lifetime" MPG is on paper:
13,788 miles / 495.9 gallons used which is 27.8 MPG true lifetime.
Of that, 6280 miles were towing.
(so I'm proud of the MPG)
Mathematics agrees with observations:
After returning home, removing the trailer, and going back to daily commute:
Never reset meter start: 19.0 MPG
Trip 2 reset to zero.
Drove 271 miles to and from work over two weeks.
271 miles averaged 49.0 MPG.
In 271 short miles (out of 14,000) the never reset meter increased from 19.0 MPG to 20.4 MPG.
My one-way trip to Alaska was 2540 miles. It was at the destination then did I notice my tank MPG (the one I reset) and my never reset MPG matched. I knew at that moment all my high MPG commute data had been overwritten
Using algebraic equations to solve for "what is size of trip meter" it came to 2418 miles.
Probably due to exact driving conditions this can vary a little. But it won't vary much.
Up to you if you want to round down and call your long term average 2400 miles. Or round up to 2500 miles, one-fourth of an oil change interval.
But the truck does not keep MPG data "forever".
(Your truck probably does not either.)
You can "reset to zero" your trip odometer and MPG info whenever you want. But what happens if you never press reset?
Others have shown the miles only tally up to 9999 then roll over to zero.
The MPG value does not "roll over" but it only holds the most recent 2500 miles of fuel data.
Data is "FIFO". First In - First Out. The oldest data is overwritten as you drive beyond 2500 miles. It is a "rolling average" not a true lifetime average (unless you have gone fewer than 2500 miles total).
Case Studied:
I drove 8427 miles on 210 gallons. (1000 of that was towing). This is 40.1 MPG true lifetime. But my "never reset meter" was displaying 47 MPG, because none of the towing was in the past 2500 miles and I have a very gentle commute route.
Then, at 8427 miles I towed a big trailer from California to Alaska and return. On this long towing trip, I got 18 MPG on paper, and my "never reset trip meter" displayed 19.0 MPG.
My true "lifetime" MPG is on paper:
13,788 miles / 495.9 gallons used which is 27.8 MPG true lifetime.
Of that, 6280 miles were towing.
(so I'm proud of the MPG)
Mathematics agrees with observations:
After returning home, removing the trailer, and going back to daily commute:
Never reset meter start: 19.0 MPG
Trip 2 reset to zero.
Drove 271 miles to and from work over two weeks.
271 miles averaged 49.0 MPG.
In 271 short miles (out of 14,000) the never reset meter increased from 19.0 MPG to 20.4 MPG.
My one-way trip to Alaska was 2540 miles. It was at the destination then did I notice my tank MPG (the one I reset) and my never reset MPG matched. I knew at that moment all my high MPG commute data had been overwritten
Using algebraic equations to solve for "what is size of trip meter" it came to 2418 miles.
Probably due to exact driving conditions this can vary a little. But it won't vary much.
Up to you if you want to round down and call your long term average 2400 miles. Or round up to 2500 miles, one-fourth of an oil change interval.
But the truck does not keep MPG data "forever".
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