How many people drive Yank V8's as daily drivers

How many people drive Yank V8's as daily drivers

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Andy-lhbz2

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Monday 5th September 2016
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I did until 2013 (when the fuel was nearly £1.50/litre) now considering it again. Just wondered if I was in the minority?

My T-bird does about 26mpg on a 50 mile/day commute mainly on the motorway, which considering its a 4.6 I don't think is too bad.

Do you have a cut-off, either on fuel prices (when it goes over a certain figure), or commute distance?

HappyMidget

6,788 posts

115 months

Monday 5th September 2016
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Commute 20 miles each way in my Chevy LSA Supercharged 6.2L V8. Works out cheaper than my previous commute by train into London.

Andy-lhbz2

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Monday 5th September 2016
quotequote all
Very nice. What kind of mpg do you get in that one?

HappyMidget

6,788 posts

115 months

Monday 5th September 2016
quotequote all
Andy-lhbz2 said:
Very nice. What kind of mpg do you get in that one?
Anywhere between 12-25mpg depending on conditions I think.

Ubendum

105 posts

137 months

Monday 5th September 2016
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Me, and whats more, its a Hemi..

sassanach0

215 posts

232 months

Monday 5th September 2016
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14.5mpg (on lpg)cadillac sts....

Andy625uk

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Monday 5th September 2016
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I see there are more of us than I realised.

Andy625uk

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Monday 5th September 2016
quotequote all
Ubendum said:
Me, and whats more, its a Hemi..
New or older?

Andy625uk

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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sassanach0 said:
14.5mpg (on lpg)cadillac sts....
Lpg always seemed like the ideal solution to me. I wish I'd had my T-bird converted when i got it 11yrs ago. Would've paid for itself and worked out much cheaper. Never thought I'd have it this long though.

Ubendum

105 posts

137 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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Andy625uk said:
New or older?
Newer...I dont really like the Gen. II Hemis's for use as a daily. The 440's, including six packs are preferable for that. IMHO, of course.

SRT Hellcat

7,027 posts

217 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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F150 Lightning around 17mpg

vaughan watkins

512 posts

211 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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I run a 2009 Challenger SRT-8 as my daily and have for about three and a half years now, I LPG it as it was hurting when fuel costs were high as I do 15k-20k a year, the display says around 14mpg average which is US so probably more like 16-17mpg, this equates to roughly £40 of gas to 200 miles where as petrol was double that. ive done 63k miles in it and love it

vaughan watkins

512 posts

211 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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kapiteinlangzaam said:
Any problems with putting the LPG on it?

I have to say im a little bit tempted to do it on mine as covering 20k per year means ill recoup the cost quickly.

Ive not seen anyone else put LPG on a Coyote motor though.
ive had no problems with it effecting the engine, I looked into it and the guy I used had done a few SRT8 jeeps and had checked into the engine with Prins who said it would be ok, some engines need flash lube but the dodge engine did not require it, I did have a scare though as Matt Harper on here raised concerns that the dodge engine needs top end lubrication and felt the engine would be harmed, but I spoke with the installers who felt thee was nothing to be concerned with so I have left it be, its now done 63k miles and still as good as the day I bought it so im happy as it has made running a car like this cheap in all honesty

KevinCamaroSS

11,615 posts

280 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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My wife and I split our commuting among the 3 cars we share. We have two Jeep Renegades and a Camaro SS. Last month we drove 3,000 miles of which 997 were in the Camaro. 6.2 litres of V8 still manages up to 30 mpg cruising on the motorway (but not when it is me driving). Our average with the car is 26.5mpg. What is not to like?

Andy625uk

Original Poster:

16 posts

98 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
quotequote all
KevinCamaroSS said:
My wife and I split our commuting among the 3 cars we share. We have two Jeep Renegades and a Camaro SS. Last month we drove 3,000 miles of which 997 were in the Camaro. 6.2 litres of V8 still manages up to 30 mpg cruising on the motorway (but not when it is me driving). Our average with the car is 26.5mpg. What is not to like?
Pretty much the same as my T-bird.

Matt Harper

6,615 posts

201 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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My wife work commutes in our 392 Challenger - only 5-6 miles each way - but urban stop and start. I consider it my duty to blow the cobwebs out at the weekend.

Matt Harper

6,615 posts

201 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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vaughan watkins said:
ive had no problems with it effecting the engine, I looked into it and the guy I used had done a few SRT8 jeeps and had checked into the engine with Prins who said it would be ok, some engines need flash lube but the dodge engine did not require it, I did have a scare though as Matt Harper on here raised concerns that the dodge engine needs top end lubrication and felt the engine would be harmed, but I spoke with the installers who felt thee was nothing to be concerned with so I have left it be, its now done 63k miles and still as good as the day I bought it so im happy as it has made running a car like this cheap in all honesty
There's maybe a bone of contention here that was not deliberate on my part. I think that Vaughan's positive experience with his LPG conversion is good news. My only caution is when it comes to the small-print. If your LPG conversion guarantees repair/replacement protection against damage caused by a lack of upper cylinder lubricant (LPG does not have lubricating properties, as does gasoline) - then I'd say have at it.

I don't have as deep an understanding of the Ford 5.0, as I do Mopar Apache 372 and 392 (having bracket raced both quite regularly). One sure-fire way to destroy the exhaust valves and seats on these engines is to starve them of UCL. Nor am I a fan of flash lube, which ultimately contaminates the O2 sensors to the point where they are likely to fail also.

I think it all boils down to how risk averse you are. The fact that I have modified my car and race it quite hard means that my manufacturers warranty is no longer worth a turd, so it's not like I'm conservative or critical of others who do likewise. I live in a part of the world where fuel is relatively cheap, so am less qualified to make a constructive cost/benefit argument - but I think you will struggle to find ANY LPG company that will guarantee their system against valve/seat erosion damage in ANY engine - much less the ones that really do rely on good UCL.

SRT Hellcat

7,027 posts

217 months

Tuesday 6th September 2016
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I must admit to not being a fan of LPG. I would rather suffer the fuel consumption. That said if it is working for you, happy days

vaughan watkins

512 posts

211 months

Wednesday 7th September 2016
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SRT Hellcat said:
I must admit to not being a fan of LPG. I would rather suffer the fuel consumption. That said if it is working for you, happy days
When I was putting £150 a week in I had to decide do I sell the car or risk LPG, I opted LPG lol just means I can use it as a daily and afford it, if I could afford the petrol I wouldn't have gone LPG, its saved me around £2,500 in 13 months of use, now 3 years down the line I will have saved circa £5-6k in fuel costs, im not a wealthy man so its enabled me to run a nice car as a daily on a car allowance from work biggrin

BillyWhizz888

901 posts

153 months

Thursday 8th September 2016
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2000 f150 4x4 5.4 daily use