I've kept it under 4k rpm for the 800 miles I have put on during the break-in period, I am averaging 18.1 mpg. I also don't have Sasquatch, but Badlands with 33's.
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Okay savage, there are apps for that now.@redone17 nailed it. It’s also in the manual.
I’d also suggest keeping your fuel receipts and write the odometer reading on the receipt when you fuel up. With some math you can get a much more accurate MPG calculation than what the computer tells you.
If you keep track over MPG over time it’ll help you detect problems. On my old F-100, keeping track let me know one of my spark plugs were bad. Nowadays something like that would probably be detected by the computer, but still, it helps.
Psssshhh apps. Nothing is better than a pen and paper!!!Okay savage, there are apps for that now.
Yes there's a trip 1 and trip 2 counter display, each can be reset on their own. Also noted in the manual screenshot in post #3.Is there a way to auto reset a certain trip after a full up? My other vehicle has this and it's a nice feature.
You'd love Fuelly.comPsssshhh apps. Nothing is better than a pen and paper!!!
Truthfully I track all my stuff in Excel. For awhile I tried to just directly input the info into Excel on my phone. But Excel on a phone is just... painful. Significantly faster just to write it on the receipt and stash it away in my sun visor.
Once every 3-5 months I'll grab all of the receipts out of my visor and plug them into Excel on my desktop. Then I can spit out stats and graphs and other nonsense.
This is my Focus' summary:
I'm not sure you understood my question.Yes there's a trip 1 and trip 2 counter display, each can be reset on their own. Also noted in the manual screenshot in post #3.
No.I'm not sure you understood my question.
Our Honda resets trip 2 (which I've set) after you fill the tank up.
Is there a way to automatically reset the trip on the Bronco this way?