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Yes, I think it was.So do you think it was the tire/rim sizes that made the difference?
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Yes, I think it was.So do you think it was the tire/rim sizes that made the difference?
There is no rollover for MPG. That is a continual calculation based on the miles counter and the gallons counter. The only "rollover" would be when the miles resets to 0 at 10K miles and I presume there would be a reset on the gallons, perhaps at 1,000 or maybe 10,000 gallons.[QUOTE="Mavbollover point for MPG?
My calculations are weighted by milage.No, your calculations are unweighted. The towing trip used almost 2.5x as much fuel and should receive 2.5x the weight.
The total trip used 97 gallons in 2273 miles. How is that not 23.4 mpg?
This is correct, basic math.It would be interesting to calculate it by hand if you knew how many gallons total were used. I wonder how close (or far) it would be to the # the truck displayed.
EDIT: I calculated all of this by hand and got 23.37 MPG. Somebody let me know if my thinking is off but I think this would actually be the way to do it.
First drive: 1063 miles at 15.5 MPG = 68.5806 Gallons
Second drive: 1210 miles at 42.2 MPG = 28.6730 Gallons
Round trip fuel usage: 68.5806 + 28.6730 = 97.2536 Gallons
Final MPG: 2273 miles / 97.2536 gallons = 23.3719 MPG
So, this leads me to believe your truck's trip 1 result at the end of your round trip is correct.
The calc's keep the average going past 10K - at least for my last oil change that went over on Trip 2.There is no rollover for MPG. That is a continual calculation based on the miles counter and the gallons counter. The only "rollover" would be when the miles resets to 0 at 10K miles and I presume there would be a reset on the gallons, perhaps at 1,000 or maybe 10,000 gallons.
The two mpg figures would never become equal if you leave the two trips continue to run because the first one would always have the extra trip towing in it to account for. Mathematically, the two would continually become closer to each other but never the same.