Good luck with that argument. I can't wait to give my wife back the keys to her 2006 Jetta TDI (sedan) tonight, and go back to driving my car. Seems like every time I drive her car, it's on the hairy edge of being out of fuel. When I left for work yesterday, I filled up my '04 Jetta Wagon TDI, so I had 600+ miles of range left on mine.TDI SportWagon is the wife's new car, as of two weeks ago. Seems terribly dangerous... I can't manage to keep it under 80mph once I get on the highway. Trying to convince the wife I should get the Jetta and she should take the '01 Insight... for her own safety, of course.
According to factory window stickers, the gearing of the DSG in the '06 was good for 42mpg highway where the '06 5spd was 41mpg, not sure how the later 6spd manuals stack up. I had the pleasure of putting 90k miles on an '06 Jetta_TDI_DSG as my company car until 2012. My commute was 32 miles door to door, mix of 6 miles city, 26 miles interstate with 70mph speed limit. I regularly got 39mpg in it. I could coax 41mpg out of the DSG if I ran closer to 65mph (which was 70mph on the optimistic speedo). The TDI had the lowest fuel bill in the company fleet.Both cars have/had the 6 speed DSG. I wonder if the gearing in 6th is different for the manuals.
Dodge just came out with a half ton getting about 28 Hwy. There is still a need for a compact pickup that would do much better. Toyota used to make one in the 80s. I think ill wind up going straight to electric by the time anyone fills the gap.Still driving my 82 VW diesel pickup.
Mileage usually high 40's and sometime in low 50's. Winter running fuel oil(North Dakota) with additive it can drop into low 40's.
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Iv never heard of any non-diesel truck getting in the 30s. The ranger is not rated for that kind of MPG so your doing pretty good.My '94 Ranger can get 30+ on the freeway if I drive at 60mph. It's 5th gear is definitely overdrive.
Dodge just came out with a half ton getting about 28 Hwy. There is still a need for a compact pickup that would do much better. Toyota used to make one in the 80s. I think ill wind up going straight to electric by the time anyone fills the gap.
2nd one that I've had that can do it. The previous one was a '93, manual everything including steering. 4 cyl with a tall 5th gear and under 3000 lbs. Minimal accessories and no A/C also helps. I keep the tire pressure up around 38 lbs.. Cruise at 55-60mph in 5th and it will deliver low 30s as long as it's not pulling or hauling a load. Newer models put on a couple hundred pounds or more and have a bit lower 5th gear.
Calculate the fuel mileage by hand just to make sure that the computer is somewhat accurate.... I wonder if it hasn't had a chance to "calibrate" being it's a new car?
I don't mean to sound like a debbie downer, but I'd be very surprised if it's getting that good of fuel mileage. Most people average high 30s-low 40s with the newer models.
I have a 2005 Mk4 Jetta, and it has averaged about 43mpg over the 4 years I've had it. ( I keep track of every fillup) BEST tank I ever got was 48mpg and worst was 37mpg. Mine is the pump doushe (hehe) BEW motor, not as good as fuel mileage as the older mechanical pump mk4s.
Matt... a truck is WAY too handy to not have one! I just use the Jetta as the "beater" for commuting. Also have a diesel truck, but at ~15mpg I'd go broke driving it 500 miles a week to work and back.
I've had a Toyota Echo for 14 years, not a diesel of course but it gets 45-50 mpg consistently on the highway but less in the winter. It has 212,000 on the clock and still runs like new. I've always had a gas sipping car and a old truck on the side.
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