Having the camera off center and pointing at a slight angle because of the door curvature sucks. I can see getting a different camera at some point. Oh! I could just slap this thing on the receiver closer to the center.
Having the camera off center and pointing at a slight angle because of the door curvature sucks. I can see getting a different camera at some point. Oh! I could just slap this thing on the receiver closer to the center.
i'm working on a 2003 e350sd, i have been thinking about a raised roof, what sort of MPGs are you getting?
In reply to tdrrally:
10 in the city and 14 on the highway. Went back to the stock tune because the 5 Star tune cost me several MPG.
java230 wrote: What's the thing in the hitch? I haven't seen that before
Whoops, thought I had posted that already. It's the Smittybilt Beaver step. I was looking at receiver mounted recovery points and came across this. It works as a step, bumper saver, and a recovery point that is really easy to use.
In reply to Petrolburner:
that's not too bad, the stock vans at work get about 14 mpg combined but the oldest is a 2011 my van has a CNG engine that i converted to run on gas.
thank you i may start shopping for a raised roof.
java230 wrote: Ah cool, I have only seen the shackle mount ones.
Yeah I had intended to get one of those but this seemed even better because it's a step and if someone bumps into the back of my van it's less likely to damage my rig. There's also nothing to steal, since the whole thing is attached with a locking receiver hitch pin. But the bow shackle on the traditional style could be easily stolen if left on. There's also no shackles or anything in order to connect the snatch strap and it's more secure than just a plain old hook.
Hit the road today
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In reply to tdrrally:
Agreed. I'd be ecstatic to get 14 mpg in a van like that. Even my old E150 with a bone stock 5.0 EFI could barely manage 17 mpg, driven very conservatively.
These are giant bricks pushing through the air and in my experience, speed makes a big difference in MPG.
In Las Vegas. Decided to throw on a new set of tires. BFT AT KO2. I had the 20k mile Treadwrights rebalanced before I left and they're still terrible and they took a lot of weight. Decided to error on the safe side and just get some new, durable, designed for Baja tires. Wish I would have gotten it done in Oregon to avoid the sales tax but oh well.
Driving home into a rather large snowstorm. Heater sucks. Always has. Any ideas? The hot/cold diverter seems to work fine but maybe it's not getting to the fully hot position? Where is it? Can I double check it manually? Next would probably be a heater core back flush.
My mom drove her Dodge van for the better part of a decade with the fresh air foot vents on the driver's side open. When I started driving I closed them because my feet were cold and she thought I was a genius. I'd check to make sure all of the available doors are working as expected.
Worst case, what about adding a rear air setup from a passenger version of your van? It should have a separate heater core, fan, and duct setup. It would add more heat to the large cavity that is the interior.
FWIW, mine has super toasty light-you-on-fire heat. Maybe it's an issue with the vacuum connector above the evaporator (there's an access hatch on the top of the dash). Mine was leaking there once.
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