First of all hello, this is a great site and I have enjoyed gaining all the info so far.
Just to add a different view on the old MPG debate, I have 31 x 10.5 r15 mud terrain Bridgestone's on my 93 30lttd auto. I live in a fairly flat part of Norfolk and drive like a granny with a hot cup of tea on my lap. I have a best of 23.6 mpg and a worst of 22.1 mpg.
I have tried keeping revs below 2500 and I did get the best figure doing this, but the tractors were out accelerating me.
So, my question is this , can I improve my MPG with a change of tread to something with a little less grunt.
My previous car was a '94 Nissan Patrol SWB 4.2 diesel manual. That had 31x 11.5 r15 Bridgestone AT's, weighed 250kg more than the surf and has the aerodynamics of parachute. I had a best of 29.9 and the poorest was 25.2, pulling a full 3.5 tons, that's 5 and three quarter tons all in.
So all you high 20's and 30 plus folks, what tyres are you running?
Cheers
Steve.
Just to add a different view on the old MPG debate, I have 31 x 10.5 r15 mud terrain Bridgestone's on my 93 30lttd auto. I live in a fairly flat part of Norfolk and drive like a granny with a hot cup of tea on my lap. I have a best of 23.6 mpg and a worst of 22.1 mpg.
I have tried keeping revs below 2500 and I did get the best figure doing this, but the tractors were out accelerating me.
So, my question is this , can I improve my MPG with a change of tread to something with a little less grunt.
My previous car was a '94 Nissan Patrol SWB 4.2 diesel manual. That had 31x 11.5 r15 Bridgestone AT's, weighed 250kg more than the surf and has the aerodynamics of parachute. I had a best of 29.9 and the poorest was 25.2, pulling a full 3.5 tons, that's 5 and three quarter tons all in.
So all you high 20's and 30 plus folks, what tyres are you running?
Cheers
Steve.
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