My jeep: 97, 4.0 / AX-15 / 200,300 miles.
I just made the drive today, put 18 gallons in from empty, and drove to VA. I got stuck in traffic on the Cross Bronx Expressway for about an hour, so I wasnt getting good mileage there, and then did a bit of city driving in NJ to visit my buddy. When my tank was at half, I was at 235 on the trip meter. I do 75mph or so and at 5th gear im running around 2100-2200 rpm's. When I stopped to get gas again, I was at 464 on the trip meter. Had I not been stuck in traffic, had I not did some city driving, and if I went 65 the whole way, and drafted some 18 wheelers, Im fairly confident I can get 500 miles out of 18 gallons of gas, which would equal about 27.7 MPG.
Any tips/advice, or anyone else who gets really good miles out of their jeep?
It sounds like you're doing really well with your MPG's, but I don't think you're calculating correctly. You say you put in 18 gals from empty. Unless you coasted, or were towed, in with no gas, you were not empty. My '96 has a 21 gallon tank. So you may have had a 3-3.5 gallon cushion.
The most accurate way to calc your mpg (assuming you gps'd
distance as well as speed to verify odometer accuracy) is to pick your favorite spot, at your favorite station, and use that same spot, pointed in the same direction, as much as possible. Fill up, and let it stop at the first auto-shut off, or second, it you like, but be consistant, don't take it up to the next even dollar amount. Let it shut off by itself. Reset your trip meter to zero.
Drive yourself down close to empty, then fill up in the exact same way again. Now divide the trip miles by how much gas you actually burned; that will give you your mpg. You have to measure what you used, not what you started with, because you weren't empty when you started, and you weren't empty when you finished (close to empty, on an analog gauge, is not a precise way to measure consumption).
Pre gps days, I would verify odometer accuracy by running 100 miles according to highway mile markers vs. what the odo logged, and calculate a correction factor. I've also found that the speedo error, and the odo error are not always off by the same percentage (i.e the speed is off by 5 %, and the odo may be off by 3%).
Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to bust your stones. The reality is most people aren't all that interested in this level of accuracy, but if you want bragging rights, make sure you can back it up with analytical, not anecdotal, data.
Steve