Real World mpg

Just did a little over 900 miles over the weekend from Rochester, NY to Dayton, OH. Highway speed averaging 80 ish(!) and finished with 20.5 MPG.
I've found similar...80mph gets a little over 20mpg. I fought my instinct and drove 70-73 for a while and was getting 22-24, so there definitely seems to be an air resistance penalty over 75!
 
When people re posting their mpg data, what drive mode are folks using? Eco, Normal or Sport? Or does that even matter? I assumed Eco would yield the best result.
 
About 250 miles and I’m at 17.4 mpg…probably 2/3 city, 1/3 hwy. I do have a bit of a heavy foot when accelerating…I’m happy with it…best mileage of the cars I own.
Mostly normal drive mode, though I tried sport mode out of curiosity…didn’t notice any difference in how it drove. Hoping it will improve slightly after some more “break in” miles…I have the OEM Michelins, so it will prob only get worse once I put some AT tires on…
I installed the FE skid plates, so not sure if the added weight is enough to make a difference in mpg vs standard skid plate…these are much heavier.
 
When people re posting their mpg data, what drive mode are folks using? Eco, Normal or Sport? Or does that even matter? I assumed Eco would yield the best result.

The primary difference between owners' MPG with local driving is the amount of stop and go. The primary difference with highway driving is averagespeed. There is really little to see here.

The primary purpose of Eco seems to be to make the HVAC system in Auto mode even less responsive to a hot car.
 
Maybe preliminary but now that i'm over 1500 miles on my LC, the mpg has appeared to hover around 22 mpg now versus a starting point of 18mpg. Like a switch went off... we wil see....
 
The primary difference between owners' MPG with local driving is the amount of stop and go. The primary difference with highway driving is averagespeed. There is really little to see here.

The primary purpose of Eco seems to be to make the HVAC system in Auto mode even less responsive to a hot car.
240+ messages in so far, and this is probably the best summary of what we are all seeing!!
 
FWIW I lost about 5 mpg just adding cross bars and new tires.

I have a 1958 that was consistently getting the EPA highway estimate of 27 mpg with the stock 245/18's and a bare roof. Since then I added roof rails, my old Yakima towers & round bars plus a set of 265/18 Firestone AT2's, my highway MPG is now around 22 mpg.

The AT2's are not super aggressive, so maybe a loss of 1 to 2 mpg max, so I think the Yakima set-up is causing a loss of 3-4 mpg ... they definitely howl. Could get a more aerodynamic set-up, but the round bars are retro like the 1958 is, and Yakima started in my home state of Washington, so I'll just live with the lower MPG's for now.

The moral of the story is that it doesn't take much for your actual MPG to fall below the EPA sticker estimates, off the lot my actual MPG did match the EPA estimates.
 
I thought I would make out like a bandit with a hybrid bird hunting on logging roads doing 6-10 mph. Not the case though, got 14-15 mpg.
 
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