Martinjmpr
Wiffleball Batter
FWIW I got 21.5 MPG on my trip yesterday from Denver to Salida to Canon City to Colorado Springs back to Denver. Actually that was my overall average which also included about a week's worth of city driving.
This is on my 2004 Tacoma with the high-rise camper shell on the back and the 3.4l V6 and a 5 speed.
I think your best bet for a new vehicle with 4x4 and good MPG would probably be something like a reg cab Taco with a 4 cyl engine and a 6 speed manual.
EDITED TO ADD: Remember that driving style has a lot to do with MPG. My style is "slow and steady." I don't do jackrabbit accelerations, I don't jump back and forth across the lanes of the interstate to get ahead of traffic and I don't pass unless someone is going really slow ahead of me. I use the cruise control whenever I can and even on the interstate I typically set it at 60-65mph and just hang out in the right lane. IOW I'm not in a hurry. That alone gives me a 10-15% boost in MPG.
This is on my 2004 Tacoma with the high-rise camper shell on the back and the 3.4l V6 and a 5 speed.

I think your best bet for a new vehicle with 4x4 and good MPG would probably be something like a reg cab Taco with a 4 cyl engine and a 6 speed manual.
EDITED TO ADD: Remember that driving style has a lot to do with MPG. My style is "slow and steady." I don't do jackrabbit accelerations, I don't jump back and forth across the lanes of the interstate to get ahead of traffic and I don't pass unless someone is going really slow ahead of me. I use the cruise control whenever I can and even on the interstate I typically set it at 60-65mph and just hang out in the right lane. IOW I'm not in a hurry. That alone gives me a 10-15% boost in MPG.
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