BAT
Well-Known Member
I figured with the Tazer I could put in the tire size myself to be a bit more accurate. I also forgot I need to take into account the Idrive unit I put in could be a factor. I've had it set on the Ultimate 4 setting and this thing is way more responsive in regards to the throttle than before. I just barely press on the throttle and it goes. I guess I could play around with the Eco modes and see if that changes my mileage. Usually I do a lot of highway miles but with the virus and working from home all the time I am not seeing much highway miles right now just stop and go city milesIt gets better - normally, anyway. No miracles, but many times you gain some mpg with time and miles. The computer learns, things wear in and loosen up.
Each new vehicle I've had over the years always seemed to get better somewhere between 7,000 and 10,000 miles. My AMCs it was usually about 10,000 miles, then they'd seem to do better power-wise and mpg-wise. My trucks have been similar - although my Ford seemed to get worse with age.
My Overland got Rubicon take-offs last winter and the rolling size was so very close the speedometer/odometer was really still almost spot-on according to radar and my Garmin stand-alone GPS. The measured height of the truck with the tires swapped was still pretty much the same. But with a Sport that will likely be different - and looks like you found it was.
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