Yellow Buddy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2022
- Threads
- 23
- Messages
- 2,311
- Reaction score
- 3,024
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic
- Vehicles
- F-150L Pro, Rivian R1T, Model S, Model X
- Occupation
- Smart Ass
That seems low...I have a 2023 Lariat ER, I was able to buy it off the lot and take it home same-day. Overall, I have been incredibly happy with the truck, but my range so far has been... worryingly bad.
I need to make a semi-frequent round trip 150 miles each way, and so highway range does matter to me. I knew I would take a highway range hit from the EPA estimated 320, and so I figured ~260miles and that I would need to juice up once on the 300 mile trip (plus some in-town driving). But I've been getting 1.6 or 1.7 m/kwh on the highway (cruise control at 75mph). 60 degrees, fair weather, etc., Hankook Dynapro All Terrains on 20" wheels from the dealer.
This seems below what most are reporting, and so I'm looking for ways to increase range. I've seen some discussions of 18" wheels producing better range, but I can't find anything that analyzes the difference in depth, especially assuming the same tires.
What kind of efficiency difference can I actually expect by changing from the 20" wheels to the 18"? Can you point me at any sources that dig into this?
My 2022 Lariat ER only dips down to 1.6 or 1.7 when I'm doing 85mph+ on the highway, and I'm talking about long trips. Once to twice a month I do a 1000 mile round trip drive.
I get 1.5 on average with a 25' camper in tow at 70-75mph.
I can get 280-290 miles reliably out of my truck, except for two months where the truck was nerfed and I was getting only about 250.
Oh - and this is with big elephant eared tow mirrors on my truck too. 20's. Antenna Delete. Tonneau cover.
HVAC set to 68-70 typically, Auto-1 bar.
At 75mph I get about 1.8-2.1, up to 2.3 if the weather is PERFECT.
Sponsored