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Thread: New Hilux Fuel Consumption

  1. #76
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    Quote Originally Posted by Russian 22. View Post
    how would the dye help if the engine burns the fuel to run?
    They can sample the tank or container.
    Think Britain has similar
    rugerman and Russian 22. like this.

  2. #77
    Caretaker - Gone But Not Forgotten jakewire's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hotbarrels View Post
    A snorkel is designed to keep water out of your engine when you are wading in deep water. As a bonus, in dusty conditions at reasonable speed, they will reduce the dust intake. They are restrictive to air flow and if added to a stock engine with no other mods to counter their restrictive nature, will pull back horsepower and reduce economy.
    Tell me more please.?
    I had a snorkel fitted when I bought mine, before I drove it away, mine was more for dusty roads than water, but...
    What other mods should I be considering.?
    bigbear likes this.
    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

  3. #78
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    Quote Originally Posted by jakewire View Post
    Tell me more please.?
    I had a snorkel fitted when I bought mine, before I drove it away, mine was more for dusty roads than water, but...
    What other mods should I be considering.?
    What i don't get is some snorkel brands advertise more fuel efficiency by adding a snorkel

  4. #79
    Almost literate. veitnamcam's Avatar
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    The biggest problem the OP has is he is expecting to get at or near the manufacturers quoted consumption figures.
    The quoted consumption figures for hwy city or combined are how the vehicle performed in a standardised test that has nothing to do with real world driving.
    The tests are standardised to enable the consumer to compare apples with apples when researching the fuel usage of a prospective vehicle.

    They in no way indicate that the vehicle should achieve said figures in real world driving and it (any vehicle) probably wont unless you drive slow enough to get shit thrown out the window at you.
    "Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.

    308Win One chambering to rule them all.

  5. #80
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tahr View Post
    When I was a kid farmers didn't pay any tax on their farm petrol. Petrol that was bulk delivered to the farm was dyed (blue I think) to ensure that it was only used for farm use. Late 1950's
    Know of a cocky who was having problems with IRD, they wanted to place die in the farm tanks to see where the fuel was heading, this was approx. 20 years ago

  6. #81
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    @stagstalker asked a couple hilux owners.
    2020 D/C auto SR flatdeck, snorkel, 18" rims ATs sitting on 11 never been reset, heavy boot
    2021 d/c auto sr5 canopy, tows a trailer a bit around 10-10.5
    2022 d/c auto sr5 canopy very low kms sitting on around 11 unsure if thats including towing his 6.5m boat

    The 2021 owner said one way to drink diesel is running in cruise control
    stagstalker likes this.

  7. #82
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    Quote Originally Posted by tetawa View Post
    Know of a cocky who was having problems with IRD, they wanted to place die in the farm tanks to see where the fuel was heading, this was approx. 20 years ago
    Know a cocky who does a lot of farming at Waihau Bay and shifting his cattle 12 miles out. LOL. .
    Micky Duck likes this.

  8. #83
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    Name:  20220629_154212.jpg
Views: 238
Size:  1.52 MB
    jakewire and Moa Hunter like this.

  9. #84
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    Quote Originally Posted by Russian 22. View Post
    how would the dye help if the engine burns the fuel to run?
    Most engines in those days would run on all sorts of mixs with a bit of octane thrown in. Kerosene mixed up with abit of whisky would get my fathers old Farmal H tractor going it he was short of petrol in the 50-60s.
    Last edited by Trout; 29-06-2022 at 10:48 PM.
    Russian 22. likes this.

  10. #85
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    Noticed a glitch today normally about 11or 12l came right though!

  11. #86
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    Quote Originally Posted by csmiffy View Post
    They can sample the tank or container.
    Think Britain has similar
    Britain they have a marine fuel that is one colour, a farm fuel thats another and the road is a different one again. Heaven help you if you get caught with the wrong colour in the wrong tank...

    If you have dye in the fuel, it's a pain in the arse and can screw up your filters bigtime. The colouring chemical they put in at the fuel supplier isn't a dye as such so won't settle out like a dye can. Used to use the purple spray marker dye in diesel at an outfit I used to work at where the diesel was used as a process fuel and we needed to know how the mix was. It was quite hard on the fuel system and one dose of dye would last for several tank fills as it settled out below the tank pickup and you needed to have more in the tank to force it to stain the fuel. The dye also seemed to drag water out of the fuel which was a pain, and the other thing the dye did was it seemed to force the wax to settle out of the diesel at a warmer temperature than otherwise so in a cold snap the fuel filters clogged up with a waxy, wet purple ooze that stained everything that got within 15m... Nasty.
    Moa Hunter likes this.

  12. #87
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    Quote Originally Posted by Trout View Post
    Most engines in those days would run on all sorts of mixs with a bit of octane thrown in. Kerosene mixed up with abit of whisky would get my fathers old Farmal H tractor going it he was short of petrol in the 50-60s.
    by the sounds of it you could use old cooking oil from the chinese takeaway with a bit of acetone added!
    Trout likes this.

  13. #88
    Member hotbarrels's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jakewire View Post
    Tell me more please.?
    I had a snorkel fitted when I bought mine, before I drove it away, mine was more for dusty roads than water, but...
    What other mods should I be considering.?
    Check out newhilux.net
    It's an Aust based forum. Plenty of info there to consider.

  14. #89
    Member Savage1's Avatar
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    From what I remember Britan has no dye in their road (taxed) diesel, and farm diesel has a dye in it that makes it look orange, quite noticable but is reffered to as 'red' diesel.

    They could quickly check road vehicles by dipping tanks or at the water trap.

    We never had any issues with the dye effecting any of our machinery.

    Pros and cons.

  15. #90
    Member stagstalker's Avatar
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    Quick update. I did a week of running to and from work and got some proper numbers to calculate. 587km for 65L of fuel. By my math that gave me 11.07L per 100km. My dash reading has dropped over the week to 12.5L but obviously still quite a ways out as a few of you said it would be. Interesting
    Carbine likes this.

 

 

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