Assuming an average truck gets about 6.5 mpg, going 65 mph 10 gallons of diesel is consumed in one hour. How much diesel is consumed in 1 hour of idling, or in 10 hours? Is it possible to run heat or A/C when engine is off?
Thanks for everybody's input.
Idling fuel consumption
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Night_driver, Sep 27, 2014.
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If you Idle it burns about a gallon an HR. And no, heat and ac wont work when your truck is off.
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Idling burns about 0.6-1 gal/hour, depending on the engine.
You can heat a truck with a bunk heater which burns not even 1 gallon for the entire night.
You can cool a truck with a diesel-powered apu which burns .1-.3 gal/hour. And there are electric apu's which can cool a truck for 8 hours before needing 4 hours' driving to recharge.
That means if you drove a truck 11 hours at 6.5mpg, then idled for 10 hours, your overall mpg would drop to 5.96-6.15mpg (depending on your idling burn rate).Night_driver Thanks this. -
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elamigowapo, TruckDuo, browndawg and 3 others Thank this.
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Hi Night_driver, many old timers may roll their eyes at a question like this, but that's what this site is all about, (asking questions, not the rolling eyes part) The heat in your truck comes from the warm coolant in the motor, and when the engine is shut off, the coolant doesn't circulate, thus cooling off, no heat. Similarly, the A/C comes from a compressor ,also run by the engine, when the engine is off, the compressor stops turning, no cool air. Idling has many disadvantages, it uses fuel, (about 1 gal./hr) and dilutes the oil with condensation and contaminants from the engine not running at normal temperature, as diesels tend to run a lot colder at idle. Idling for 10 hours will cost you,(or the company) $40, and for a few more bucks, you could almost get a motel. APU's, (auxiliary power units) have like a small diesel motor that runs a generator (for the fan) and circulates the coolant, and use substantially less fuel, but cost thousands of dollars, so in a way, it's cheaper in the long run to idle the motor. You have to be warm(or cool) so if you must idle the motor, step up the idle to 1000 rpm's, either with your cruise control, or a stick on the gas pedal. It keeps the engine warmer, and doesn't load up the motor like idling at 5-600 rpm's. Hope this helps.
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Your profile shows "student", so you must be planning for your first job.
Look for companies with diesel APU's as first choice and battery APU's as second choice. Tri-Pac diesel is the most popular.
Most tanker companies don't have APU's but have no idle restriction.Night_driver Thanks this. -
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'08 Volvo idles @ 900 RPM's uses .4-.6 g/hr. it shows right in the dash readout.
about $15/night. no motel I would stay for that price. -
There is quite a bit more to the equation than JUST fuel cost. Personally, I won't go out overnight without getting a room. If the load doesn't pay enough for me to be comfortable, it doesn't pay enough for me to do.Canadianhauler21, Night_driver and 201 Thank this.
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