This is really just an academic or rhetorical question, but I'm curious as to what the general consensus would be.
Now, I'm asking in my context, but the idea applies universally. I drove up to a friend's ranch today, the same route that I posted photos from a while back. It's a rough road, all gravel, big rocks and bedrock, and almost all ups and downs. I finally did the whole run today in 4LO. Didn't shift out of low range until I got back to the main road (which really is not much better than the road to my friend's place). Previously I would shift between 4LO and 4HI, depending mostly on the slant of the road. Really, low range is most useful on those long and steep downhill runs where high range or 2WD would mean either careening downhill at a dangerous pace or burning up my brake pads.
It felt like the Jeep ran a lot better using 4LO all the way as opposed to shifting back in high range periodically. What I'm wondering about is fuel consumption. I see that the tachometer stays about in the same range as if I were juicing it high range, maybe even sometimes a little lower. Given this fact, I'm figuring that my fuel consumption in low range should not be appreciably higher than it would be in high, and might even be better as the engine is not having to work as hard to pull me up hills. Even on the downhill runs the revs don't get way up as I crawl down.
What do you all think?
(I cannot really go by how much fuel I put into the tank when I fill her up as I'm siphoning out of gasoline jugs due to the fact that I am in a little village up in the mountains with no gasoline pumps; ergo, I really can't get a consistent full point. And I know that fuel consumption is really not at the top of most of our lists of priorities, but as I said, this is an academic or rhetorical question.)
Now, I'm asking in my context, but the idea applies universally. I drove up to a friend's ranch today, the same route that I posted photos from a while back. It's a rough road, all gravel, big rocks and bedrock, and almost all ups and downs. I finally did the whole run today in 4LO. Didn't shift out of low range until I got back to the main road (which really is not much better than the road to my friend's place). Previously I would shift between 4LO and 4HI, depending mostly on the slant of the road. Really, low range is most useful on those long and steep downhill runs where high range or 2WD would mean either careening downhill at a dangerous pace or burning up my brake pads.
It felt like the Jeep ran a lot better using 4LO all the way as opposed to shifting back in high range periodically. What I'm wondering about is fuel consumption. I see that the tachometer stays about in the same range as if I were juicing it high range, maybe even sometimes a little lower. Given this fact, I'm figuring that my fuel consumption in low range should not be appreciably higher than it would be in high, and might even be better as the engine is not having to work as hard to pull me up hills. Even on the downhill runs the revs don't get way up as I crawl down.
What do you all think?
(I cannot really go by how much fuel I put into the tank when I fill her up as I'm siphoning out of gasoline jugs due to the fact that I am in a little village up in the mountains with no gasoline pumps; ergo, I really can't get a consistent full point. And I know that fuel consumption is really not at the top of most of our lists of priorities, but as I said, this is an academic or rhetorical question.)
