Sorry guys, I've been swamped trying to catch up on everything, little more than a lurker on the internet lately.
Well, that's not great mileage for a 5.9! Hopefully some improvements can be made there...
A Smarty Jr. tuner will fix that mileage up for you quick fast and in a hurry!
I hope so! I would have to go back and check the numbers but rpms were also way too high too have any decent mileage at 75+...I originally thought a gear change was in order, but we are now leaning towards a rubber overdrive:sombrero:
Does anyone else have any good recommendations for improving mpg?
One of my tasks is to make sure the suspension is working correctly. After a visual inspection, I decided to take a trip before teardown of the vehicle and get a good baseline of how the truck handled and felt before any changes were made. The dodge is equipped with a Carli suspension, King shocks, rear deaver springs,progressive coils, etc, I assumed it should be pretty well tuned out of the box, but I have also been disappointed with suspension manufacturers in the past.
I choose a route that included interstate, 2 lane high speed gravel roads, narrow off camber shelf roads, and a narrow rocky creek bottom in central AZ. Truck performed admirably, I was extremely happy with the ride quality in the 2 tracks and rough roads, and was relatively flexible even with the swaybar attached. Body roll was a little excessive on the higher speed gravel two tracks (and high speed "emergency lane change" maneuvers), but the truck would lean and then take a "set". It was a little unnerving at first, but after learning its "feel", it is quite easy to control, and is a lot more stable than the initial suspension motion makes you feel. Tightening up the sway bar links should help eliminate some of the initial loose feeling going into corners, perhaps a rear swaybar at some point.
Rear springs are a little soft, and need the airbags to compensate for the weight of the camper, those will be reworked to add in a little rate so the airbags are only compensating for the cargo load, not required for a relatively empty camper.
Some general shots of the suspension, back at the shop and ready to cycle to check for interference issues