Grassland
Well-known member
A little late since.you went with a heavy duty truck.
And, it's a hybrid F150 and not a Tundra, but I think the two are similar enough to draw some vague conclusions.
Friend and associate has an F150 Power boost with crew cab and 6.5 bed with a contractor grade aluminum topper with roof rack. FX4 package. Without ladders or pipes on the rack, his highway fuel economy in low/no wind and flat terrain he has seen 10 l per 100km for a short highway jaunt. That's about 23 MPG. But that's not usual. Normally it's about the 15 l /100 range or so (15.5-16 MPG)
Gets worse with stuff on the roof rack.
He hasn't weighed it but I suspect at least 600# of tools. Stock size non aggressive tires.
In the city is where it uses less fuel than non hybrids.
I'm a huge cyclone fan boy however will admit I'm often envious of those with forced induction.
Also somebody mentioned that the Tundra doesn't have tow hooks and it was part of the aerodynamics. I didn't know that. At least it's a reason, although I'd rather have front tow hooks
And, it's a hybrid F150 and not a Tundra, but I think the two are similar enough to draw some vague conclusions.
Friend and associate has an F150 Power boost with crew cab and 6.5 bed with a contractor grade aluminum topper with roof rack. FX4 package. Without ladders or pipes on the rack, his highway fuel economy in low/no wind and flat terrain he has seen 10 l per 100km for a short highway jaunt. That's about 23 MPG. But that's not usual. Normally it's about the 15 l /100 range or so (15.5-16 MPG)
Gets worse with stuff on the roof rack.
He hasn't weighed it but I suspect at least 600# of tools. Stock size non aggressive tires.
In the city is where it uses less fuel than non hybrids.
The base cyclone is fantastic in the longitudinal arrangement. I think the huge heat from turbos is indeed one of the issues as mentioned prior.Unfortunately Fords 3.5L ecoboost is just a spiced up Cyclone
I'm a huge cyclone fan boy however will admit I'm often envious of those with forced induction.
Also somebody mentioned that the Tundra doesn't have tow hooks and it was part of the aerodynamics. I didn't know that. At least it's a reason, although I'd rather have front tow hooks