Just bought a 10 model rock Warrior Tundra with 5.7. Being a life long GM truck guy I can tell these trucks feel more solid. (Still love GM trucks too) Great video man! Would love to see more content on this truck.
Thanks for putting this together. I have an '08 DoubleCab with 163K miles, 5.7L. Just put a new fuel pump on it, I get 17-18 mpg on the highway, maybe 200-300 lbs. in the bed, not pushing it much over 70 mph though.
I just bought a 2010 RCSB with the 5.7 and 4x4 and the first tank I ran through it was 15.5 MPG. It sounds like these things are pretty consistent with their fuel mileage to me.
I get 17.5 -17.8 quite often with my 21 tundra. I’m in Florida where the terrain is flat. That might help you in OK as well. The big thing is paying attention to how you drive.
My 2010 Crewmax 5.7L (112000 miles on truck) TRD got 18.4 mpg driving from MD to FL, doing the speed limit and cruise control. *Stock 18" wheels and tires. The think it helps to accelerate slowly and maintain tire pressure..
I have a 2008 Toyota Sequoia sr5 4x4 with the 5.7. I usually take a 4 hour trip from brownsville to San Antonio, Tx. I fill up before i leave and get over there with half a tank. Not bad for a big monster V8. I use cruise control all the way and stay at 75 mph.
I have a 2008 Double cab with the 5.7. On my drive through the mountains between BC and Alberta, I averaged 12.9L/100km, which translates to about 18 mpg. I've got 140,000km on it, and was averaging 110kmh
2020 Crewmax 4x4, 20” wheels, 285 mildly aggressive M/S tires. 2.5” leveling kit, 19mpg@ 65mph, cruise control, From Sacramento to Red Bluff. Consistently but I also stay below 2,000 rpm even taking off from a stop sign. If I want to go fast I have a built turbo diesel at home.
I have 07 double limited 2WD 5.7 with 151,000 miles, the same front spacer to level and Cooper 295/70/18’s, K&N filter. Mostly city driving average 14 mpg. If on highway, I get 17/18 also. I love my truck.
I bought a 2008 crewmax 5.7 4x4 new and now have 342k miles everything is stock besides right front wheel bearing and bank 2 catalytic converters , its pulled a trailer for about 90% of those miles between 4 and 9 thousand pounds . I dont drive it easy at all ,notmally floored to get on highways and on highways im going about 80 towing. Depending on weight i get 6.5-10 towing and with out trailer i get around 14 mpg
I have 2014 Tundra and I find that 60mph on the highway is the magic number for good mpg. I usually get 17's to 18's on the highway. I have an aftermarket AFE air filter and a tonneu cover which I found that the combo of both of those overall raised my mpg by about 1.5.
I've got a 2014 (1794) with 181,000 on it. I get 15 combined and 17-20 on the highway depending upon the wind. I you're using non-ethanol gas as well as a tailwind on that trip, I'd think you'd get even better mpg. I've been researching the new generation Tundra and as much as mines been bulletproof, I'm not convinced the new gen is much (if at all) better other than the bells and whistles part of it.
2016 tundra crewmax, 113,000 I get around 9 to 10 mpg in town and between 19 to 20,21 mpg. I was getting worse gas mileage but used ATS Chemical oil and gas treatment and now get the in town/ highway, and I get even better gas mileage at 55/60 mph. Above that and she drinks like a sailor ! Lol
2021 2wd crewmax has gotten as high as 21.5mpg on the highway which blows my mind. That was hand calculated too. Usually driving 70-75 I can pretty much get 18.5-19.5 consistently! I drive 90% highway too though
I have a 2021 with 34.5 inch Nittos and I can get 17.5 mpg no problem at the same speeds. My city stays consistent at 15.5 mpg. Apparently, Toyota did some retuning of the 5.7L in 2019 which helped give it a little more pep and slightly better fuel economy. I have a friend who has a 2014 and he can't get above 14 in the city and rarely gets 17 mpg and he runs stock tires.
Tossed in a K&N it's been great so far I do 50/50 city and highway every month had good results in other makes and models but the last owner made it a mall crawler so now I have to retrofit hoping to go with 17s and 35s if posible
If you ever get a nice stretch of road few miles long, you can achieve 23 mpg going 45 - 50 mph if you never have any stop and go traffic, I've done it many times in my 2018 sr5 2wd 5.7 crewmax.
Thanks for the video. i have a 16 DC with the 4.6 V8. I found this truck new fro 28K so couldn’t pass it up as I was looking for a used tundra this new one was not much more than used at the time. Mileage is around 12mpg in town on highway it varies highly on speed I’ve gotten 21 mpg driving at 60 mph and then 10.5 mpg doing 80+. The transmission is constantly searching for a gear on cruise control which I can’t stand so no cruise control unless it’s flat highway. I remain a Toyota fan
I bought a 2019 Tundra 4.6L and got 19.2mpg on many occasions. The transmission was usually really good but on one trip it was acting funny but never did it again. I traded it for a 5.7L and can say the 4.6L was way nicer to drive, but it didn’t tow well, it was the gears.
That's way better than I get. I've only been getting 8.2 mpg. Something's wrong. When the truck was new, I almost got 20 mpg. Mine is a 2008 4wd 5.7L dbl cab with over 265,000 miles on it.
Your mass airflow sensor is definitely caked in dirt. change your air filter, clean the MAF sensor along with throttle body and see if it helps. Spark plugs are another big one that helped mine out with MPG.
I got 16.3 ish while doing interstate driving @ 85mph. I can see 17-18mpg if i followed the speed limit. Running a 2wd crew cab, no mods except airfilter and airbox inlet mod.
Thanks, I just brought a 2017 tundra today and that's the same commute I do to work and you are right! I'm used to big v8s but I heard about the gas mileage in these trucks and i was still afraid when I brought it. No worries now I can do 17mpg and love it.120k
I have the exact same year, cab, motor, and color. Mine just has a cap on the bed. Just got it with 174k. Haven’t made any long trips with it yet but will find this video and leave a comment when I do be interesting to compare.
Just Purchased my RWD 2007 Toyota Tundra Limited CrewMax & on my First Tank of fuel- Trying Archoil & AMSOIL OW20 oil we’ll see what it does. It already impresses in the Performance arena- Grumpy Old Vet! Tundra Texas Edition 5.7L V8 running great At 143K.
Archoil 9100 friction modifier makes a huge difference, I run it in everything from lawnmower to my F250. Really does what it says it does, smoother running in my diesel, much quieter. In the Tundra? Not sure yet
Good relaxed vid & helpful - decent mpgs for the power & torque of ur 5.7 ~ my case: ‘10 Crew, 150k, but 2wd + 4.6 sucking thru a K&N drop in filter (+ bed topper), 1 size up from stock LTs on alloys / tow pkg (rear end 4:10 I think?) Brings me to about 21.5 Hwy (mixed, just like your test run). My stock exhaust always kinda drones - any sure bets out there on a possible classic lower tone exhaust that won’t sound too ‘over the top’ on heavy acceleration ?? 🤔
@@regankraus4019 tell your brother his tip is appreciated & thank you - will post the Gibson result when I get it done later in the summer - not sure if my cats will be good after 160k (or how to measure their function) so that coujd bring add’l cost...
I have the TRD Pro exhaust. I bought it for my 19 4.6L but traded it and kept the exhaust for my 17 5.7L so it has been on both trucks. The exhaust actually sounded better on the 4.6L. I love the exhaust, not too loud, no drone but if I bought another it would be the Borla with a million mile warranty.
seems to me that most vehicles get about 10% better fuel economy when not using E-10. that's from years of writing down mileage, gallons at fill ups. for me, that suggests that unless E-10 is not MORE than 10% less than non-ETOH fuels, it's more economical to run the E-10. Now, my 2018 tundra, SR5 crewcab with cooper at3's on it regularly runs in the 16-17 mpg range when on long interstate cruises at that 70-80mph range. properly inflated tires makes a difference of a little over 1mpg from some quick observations as well.
2007 Tundra 4.7 liter, 26 gallon tank. Drove from ST Louis to Chicago and couldn't make it on one tank. 285 miles and I had to stop around the 240 mile mark for fuel, so about 12MPG?
Definitely recommend a good throttle body cleaning and good fuel clean filter and MAF cleaning I go an 06 Tundra that does that in the city hope this helps you out
love our videos. I have a question . Recently Ive been offered a, 2015 Toyota Tundra TRD - SR5 _ with the 5.7L 8-Cylinder Gas Engine . Miles are under 80 thousand . Its absolutely imaculate. The only thing is its 2WD and not the 4WD , but I prefer the 2WD since it hasnt snowed where I live in 8 years. I can get the truck for under $20 thousand. I would love your advice. I really like this Toyota engine and its a crew cab. Thx Buddy.
Just got a 2015 tundra. Yeah 11.3 is what I’m getting. Of course it’s snowing up here in Alaska. I’m just trying to figure out how to get my damn tire pressure light to go off. I’m within limits.
So after having her three months it’s spring time now and but I’m not running around in four-wheel-drive I’m averaging 12.4. I’m blown away by this truck completely happy with my purchase just not the price of fuel
Sounds about right but you probably got better mpg than that as you have 33in tires which will make the odometer reading less miles than you actually traveled. That is unless you've had the speedometer adjusted for those tires
I had a 2015 crew cab 4x4 Had a 2” lift leveling kit and 35” Nitto hybrid Terra on it. Love it but every darn time I went to fill it up. It was always 11.3 Mpg best I ever saw it get was on interstate 15..5 Mpg Only had it two years worst gas mpg of anything I’ve ever owned
Nobody get a Tundra for just Gas mileage, we get it for the big mean nasty truckiness of it, the 5.7, bulky body, V8 growl, reliability and tow haul mode, ethanol clogs injectors, or at least slows them up
12.5 with an exhaust leak and a healthy foot haha. A DIY exhaust install is just as stressfull as paying the labor do it. F you ol' reliable tundra haha
Lot of people mad for some reason when you bring up mpgs on a tundra and i don’t know why. It’s kind of like you’re questioning their masculinity or something. That’s the knee jerk reaction to it. If you monitor mpgs itll tell you the health of the engine. That’s how I’ve caught faulty plugs 2 times. Its a health check on the engine nothing more nothing less lol. Tires make a huge difference in mpg. I gave Michelin Defender LTX M/S and get good mpgs because of their low roll resistance. A/T and offroad tires are heavier and will give worse mpgs.
2008 RCSB with a 5.7, 119k miles... I'll never ever sell it. Thank you for the information on the video.
bullet proof 5.7L engine
Just bought a 10 model rock Warrior Tundra with 5.7. Being a life long GM truck guy I can tell these trucks feel more solid. (Still love GM trucks too) Great video man! Would love to see more content on this truck.
14 in the city, 18 on the highway.2014 double cab with 150k, the greatest engine I have ever owned
Thanks for putting this together. I have an '08 DoubleCab with 163K miles, 5.7L. Just put a new fuel pump on it, I get 17-18 mpg on the highway, maybe 200-300 lbs. in the bed, not pushing it much over 70 mph though.
We have a 2018 SR5 Crew Cab with the 4.6L. 139,929 miles. When our son comes of age he’ll be driving this. ❤👍🏾
Mileage?
I just bought a 2010 RCSB with the 5.7 and 4x4 and the first tank I ran through it was 15.5 MPG. It sounds like these things are pretty consistent with their fuel mileage to me.
I get 17.5 -17.8 quite often with my 21 tundra. I’m in Florida where the terrain is flat. That might help you in OK as well. The big thing is paying attention to how you drive.
Me too. Totally agree with you
@@nicholaspetre1 if I drive on highway doing 70, i get 18.5 mpg, anything over 70 and mpg starts to fall off
@@davidsdean yeah, once you go over 70 mph, it drops down significantly
I have a 2017 5.7 crewmax 4x4 with 33" tires I get 14 city and anywhere from 17 to 19 on hwy just depends on wind and hills
My 2010 Crewmax 5.7L (112000 miles on truck) TRD got 18.4 mpg driving from MD to FL, doing the speed limit and cruise control. *Stock 18" wheels and tires. The think it helps to accelerate slowly and maintain tire pressure..
I have a 2008 Toyota Sequoia sr5 4x4 with the 5.7. I usually take a 4 hour trip from brownsville to San Antonio, Tx. I fill up before i leave and get over there with half a tank. Not bad for a big monster V8. I use cruise control all the way and stay at 75 mph.
Cuánto gasto por galón
I have a 2008 Double cab with the 5.7. On my drive through the mountains between BC and Alberta, I averaged 12.9L/100km, which translates to about 18 mpg. I've got 140,000km on it, and was averaging 110kmh
That’s not too bad at all
I get roughly the same with my 08, the hate these trucks get for poor fuel mileage is not warranted!
2019, 5.7, 34” X 11.50” Grapplers. Get 14 in the city and 16 on the highway.
I average 18.2 m per gallon in 2018 crewmax sport with just over a 110000 miles on it with a hard bed cover and that makes a difference
2020 Crewmax 4x4, 20” wheels, 285 mildly aggressive M/S tires. 2.5” leveling kit, 19mpg@ 65mph, cruise control, From Sacramento to Red Bluff.
Consistently but I also stay below 2,000 rpm even taking off from a stop sign.
If I want to go fast I have a built turbo diesel at home.
Just bought mine 2 days ago, my last one was a 07 Toyota matrix, it’s like going from a bathtub to jackuzi. 😅
I have 07 double limited 2WD 5.7 with 151,000 miles, the same front spacer to level and Cooper 295/70/18’s, K&N filter. Mostly city driving average 14 mpg. If on highway, I get 17/18 also. I love my truck.
Sounds like a sweet truck!
I bought a 2008 crewmax 5.7 4x4 new and now have 342k miles everything is stock besides right front wheel bearing and bank 2 catalytic converters , its pulled a trailer for about 90% of those miles between 4 and 9 thousand pounds . I dont drive it easy at all ,notmally floored to get on highways and on highways im going about 80 towing. Depending on weight i get 6.5-10 towing and with out trailer i get around 14 mpg
I have 2014 Tundra and I find that 60mph on the highway is the magic number for good mpg. I usually get 17's to 18's on the highway. I have an aftermarket AFE air filter and a tonneu cover which I found that the combo of both of those overall raised my mpg by about 1.5.
I've got a 2014 (1794) with 181,000 on it. I get 15 combined and 17-20 on the highway depending upon the wind. I you're using non-ethanol gas as well as a tailwind on that trip, I'd think you'd get even better mpg.
I've been researching the new generation Tundra and as much as mines been bulletproof, I'm not convinced the new gen is much (if at all) better other than the bells and whistles part of it.
dang the 1794 is like my dream truck every dealer around me wants like close to 50k even for a 2017 w 37k miles
@@BmwMe-uh9sy I KNOW!!! Saw a 2021 with 17K for 56,000 a few weeks ago on the "Tundra Dude" TH-cam channel. Prices are coming down though......
2016 tundra crewmax, 113,000 I get around 9 to 10 mpg in town and between 19 to 20,21 mpg. I was getting worse gas mileage but used ATS Chemical oil and gas treatment and now get the in town/ highway, and I get even better gas mileage at 55/60 mph. Above that and she drinks like a sailor ! Lol
Nice. I get 16.2 on highway. Also I have a full ranch hand bumper - trying sell that and get better tires.
2021 2wd crewmax has gotten as high as 21.5mpg on the highway which blows my mind. That was hand calculated too. Usually driving 70-75 I can pretty much get 18.5-19.5 consistently! I drive 90% highway too though
I have a 2021 with 34.5 inch Nittos and I can get 17.5 mpg no problem at the same speeds. My city stays consistent at 15.5 mpg. Apparently, Toyota did some retuning of the 5.7L in 2019 which helped give it a little more pep and slightly better fuel economy.
I have a friend who has a 2014 and he can't get above 14 in the city and rarely gets 17 mpg and he runs stock tires.
Tossed in a K&N it's been great so far I do 50/50 city and highway every month had good results in other makes and models but the last owner made it a mall crawler so now I have to retrofit hoping to go with 17s and 35s if posible
super decent mpg’s for the 5.7 - mines a ‘10 but some of you guys w/ some of the 3.5 Gens get to carry the 👌🏼larger stock 32 gal tanks as well
@@Orbi.Lee23 yea I have a 38 gallon tank
If you ever get a nice stretch of road few miles long, you can achieve 23 mpg going 45 - 50 mph if you never have any stop and go traffic, I've done it many times in my 2018 sr5 2wd 5.7 crewmax.
Thanks for the video. i have a 16 DC with the 4.6 V8. I found this truck new fro 28K so couldn’t pass it up as I was looking for a used tundra this new one was not much more than used at the time. Mileage is around 12mpg in town on highway it varies highly on speed I’ve gotten 21 mpg driving at 60 mph and then 10.5 mpg doing 80+. The transmission is constantly searching for a gear on cruise control which I can’t stand so no cruise control unless it’s flat highway. I remain a Toyota fan
I bought a 2019 Tundra 4.6L and got 19.2mpg on many occasions. The transmission was usually really good but on one trip it was acting funny but never did it again. I traded it for a 5.7L and can say the 4.6L was way nicer to drive, but it didn’t tow well, it was the gears.
That's way better than I get. I've only been getting 8.2 mpg. Something's wrong. When the truck was new, I almost got 20 mpg. Mine is a 2008 4wd 5.7L dbl cab with over 265,000 miles on it.
Yeah it sounds like you may need a tune up possibly?
I get 11.3 city . Brake calipers might be to tight
Your mass airflow sensor is definitely caked in dirt. change your air filter, clean the MAF sensor along with throttle body and see if it helps. Spark plugs are another big one that helped mine out with MPG.
Tune up ngk plugs!
this stuff plus might have a crack in the exhaust header
I got 16.3 ish while doing interstate driving @ 85mph. I can see 17-18mpg if i followed the speed limit.
Running a 2wd crew cab, no mods except airfilter and airbox inlet mod.
Mine is 2011 double cab 4x4, 5.7 with soft tonneau cover I average 17.5 mpg commuting back and forth to work. Which is 50 miles round trip.
Thanks, I just brought a 2017 tundra today and that's the same commute I do to work and you are right! I'm used to big v8s but I heard about the gas mileage in these trucks and i was still afraid when I brought it. No worries now I can do 17mpg and love it.120k
2017 5.7L 4x4 DC on stock sized KO2’s. I get 17.8mpg doing 65mph. Going 70mph and it drops off fast.
That's pretty good. I have a 11' f150 2wd regular cab with the 3.7L and I don't drive hard. I only get 18-19 mpg per tank. 😕
I have the exact same year, cab, motor, and color. Mine just has a cap on the bed. Just got it with 174k. Haven’t made any long trips with it yet but will find this video and leave a comment when I do be interesting to compare.
I’m definitely interested in your results to compare
Just Purchased my RWD 2007 Toyota Tundra Limited CrewMax & on my First Tank of fuel- Trying Archoil & AMSOIL OW20 oil we’ll see what it does. It already impresses in the Performance arena- Grumpy Old Vet! Tundra Texas Edition 5.7L V8 running great At 143K.
Archoil 9100 friction modifier makes a huge difference, I run it in everything from lawnmower to my F250. Really does what it says it does, smoother running in my diesel, much quieter. In the Tundra? Not sure yet
Good relaxed vid & helpful - decent mpgs for the power & torque of ur 5.7 ~ my case: ‘10 Crew, 150k, but 2wd + 4.6 sucking thru a K&N drop in filter (+ bed topper), 1 size up from stock LTs on alloys / tow pkg (rear end 4:10 I think?) Brings me to about 21.5 Hwy (mixed, just like your test run). My stock exhaust always kinda drones - any sure bets out there on a possible classic lower tone exhaust that won’t sound too ‘over the top’ on heavy acceleration ?? 🤔
I haven’t done anything with exhaust but my brother always swears by Gibson mufflers for a nice sound but very little to no drone on the highway
@@regankraus4019 tell your brother his tip is appreciated & thank you - will post the Gibson result when I get it done later in the summer - not sure if my cats will be good after 160k (or how to measure their function) so that coujd bring add’l cost...
I have the TRD Pro exhaust. I bought it for my 19 4.6L but traded it and kept the exhaust for my 17 5.7L so it has been on both trucks. The exhaust actually sounded better on the 4.6L. I love the exhaust, not too loud, no drone but if I bought another it would be the Borla with a million mile warranty.
Mine is 2010 tundra 5.7 double cab got 25mpg. no ac, at 65mph with low profile tire on rim22
seems to me that most vehicles get about 10% better fuel economy when not using E-10. that's from years of writing down mileage, gallons at fill ups. for me, that suggests that unless E-10 is not MORE than 10% less than non-ETOH fuels, it's more economical to run the E-10. Now, my 2018 tundra, SR5 crewcab with cooper at3's on it regularly runs in the 16-17 mpg range when on long interstate cruises at that 70-80mph range. properly inflated tires makes a difference of a little over 1mpg from some quick observations as well.
E85 gets 20-25% worse fuel economy. E10 maybe 2-3% worse than non ethanol.
2007 Tundra 4.7 liter, 26 gallon tank. Drove from ST Louis to Chicago and couldn't make it on one tank. 285 miles and I had to stop around the 240 mile mark for fuel, so about 12MPG?
When my 08 was on stock tires it did between 17-18 on the highway. 14-15 city. Now 8 inch lift and 37s I get 11 and 13.5
Got 15 in the 22 tundra, had many issues! Got rid of it!
2022 Tundra? What were the issues?
i gotta 2007 tundra running a 4.7l v8 and i’m averaging like 11mpg, also has a bed cap on the back too but it’s not too heavy
Definitely recommend a good throttle body cleaning and good fuel clean filter and MAF cleaning I go an 06 Tundra that does that in the city hope this helps you out
I was getting 12-13 in my '07 (same config as yours), changed the leaking radiator and new coolant brought it up to ~17?!?!
i have a 16 crewmax 4x4 with the 5.7, use 85 or flex fuel, and get about 18mpg on colorado highways. your number seems very reasonable.
I wonder how much better gas mileage the RWD gets? Would the higher octane gasoline get better gas mileage?
2011 5.7 with 94K. 10MPG towing, 10MPG hills, 10MPG city, 10 MPG hwy 10 MPG now matter what i do?
I have a 2016 lifted 7” on 35”s 4.6 liter v-8 says I average 12 mpg . Might as well grab a 5.7 instead 🤬
2021 trd pro tundra with michelin defender ltx ms tires. City avg 14.5 to 15.1. Hwy 17.1 to 18.5
My 2018 tundra SR5...18/ 19 in the and more than 20 m/g on the highway loaded with 1000 lbs at 75 m/h
love our videos. I have a question . Recently Ive been offered a, 2015 Toyota Tundra TRD - SR5 _ with the 5.7L 8-Cylinder Gas Engine . Miles are under 80 thousand . Its absolutely imaculate. The only thing is its 2WD and not the 4WD , but I prefer the 2WD since it hasnt snowed where I live in 8 years. I can get the truck for under $20 thousand. I would love your advice. I really like this Toyota engine and its a crew cab. Thx Buddy.
The 4.6 engine w the 4.10 rear end was always around 19-20 mpg for me but 2wd .
I have the exact same truck mine is the trd version
Just got a 2015 tundra. Yeah 11.3 is what I’m getting. Of course it’s snowing up here in Alaska. I’m just trying to figure out how to get my damn tire pressure light to go off. I’m within limits.
There is a reset button on the dash. But if that doesn’t work you may have a sensor issue
@@regankraus4019 thanks
So after having her three months it’s spring time now and but I’m not running around in four-wheel-drive I’m averaging 12.4. I’m blown away by this truck completely happy with my purchase just not the price of fuel
2012 sequoia 5.7 4×4 stock 17 mpg 15 mpg
17.8 MPG, not too shabby
I have a 2015 Tundra and my average is 15.6 MPG.
Sounds about right but you probably got better mpg than that as you have 33in tires which will make the odometer reading less miles than you actually traveled. That is unless you've had the speedometer adjusted for those tires
4wd 2010 tundra 5.7 double cab. I average 13 most of the time.
My 2017 crewmax with 160k, supercharged is getting just over 14 mpg city.
Do u have factory intake?
I’m confused what type of mpgs are you expecting from a heavy a$$ truck? I mean if you want 20 plus mpgs buy a sedan.
I actually expected less mpg than what my results were in this test
What size tires do you have exactly?
I have the same truck right now I literally have it in my driveway
I can do the same on the highway with no weight no hills no wind 75 or under but its usually more like 15.
I had a 2015 crew cab 4x4 Had a 2” lift leveling kit and 35” Nitto hybrid Terra on it. Love it but every darn time I went to fill it up. It was always 11.3
Mpg best I ever saw it get was on interstate 15..5
Mpg Only had it two years worst gas mpg of anything I’ve ever owned
I get 17.5-18.5 mpg with 35s on mine. Drive better.
My 2012 gets a steady 16
2018 20mpg hwy... when towing 13.5mpg hwy
Hum in co the guy get 12 mpg
Nobody get a Tundra for just Gas mileage, we get it for the big mean nasty truckiness of it, the 5.7, bulky body, V8 growl, reliability and tow haul mode, ethanol clogs injectors, or at least slows them up
Does it clog them up or clean out the existing build up? 20k with flex fuel in my wrx no issues whatsoever
@@snakehead5444 clogs them
12.5 with an exhaust leak and a healthy foot haha. A DIY exhaust install is just as stressfull as paying the labor do it. F you ol' reliable tundra haha
Yeah the exhaust doesn’t look like a fun job on these
I get 11.3 mpg average in town
Better mpg compared to my 2002 ford f350 v10
Lot of people mad for some reason when you bring up mpgs on a tundra and i don’t know why. It’s kind of like you’re questioning their masculinity or something. That’s the knee jerk reaction to it. If you monitor mpgs itll tell you the health of the engine. That’s how I’ve caught faulty plugs 2 times. Its a health check on the engine nothing more nothing less lol. Tires make a huge difference in mpg. I gave Michelin Defender LTX M/S and get good mpgs because of their low roll resistance. A/T and offroad tires are heavier and will give worse mpgs.
Its your cover 😊
I Average @ 12 MPG with stock sized tiers
Those tundra trucks are way more reliable than those f150 Silverado and ram trucks
30 seconds in and commenting my guess on his highway mileage 15.5 miles to the gallon.
I would much rather pay more at the pump with less times in the shop for repairs. Ex: Ford, GM..
I got 17.2 miles per gallon. On my 5.7, it's gonna happen.
I've had three now I have never gotten over 12 mpg
17 on the highway is accurate.
I always say it, what you save on gas from one of the "big 3" trucks, save it for the mechanic. OR go buy a tundra and just buy gas.
You only have 170K miles, mileage should get better when the Tundra gets broken in. 😊
I get 19 on fwy
I get about 15mpg
tundra 4.6 5.7