Gas mileage 225 Slant 6

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22 mpg at what speed ?
I bought the Dart used when a Senior in College, in the days of the song, "I can't drive 55" (federal speed limit). Owned it for 18 years until stolen. Later, speed limits crept up, but I would usually limit to 65 mph on trips. 22 mpg was on the highway.
 
Lol,
Put in a smaller speedo pinion. Why is everybody passing me

Wait is it bigger or smaller, I don't remember
yes, it's smaller. Put a pinion in with 5 fewer teeth, and You'll be able to feel Your mileage improve, as well as do 75 in a 55 w/o ever getting ticketed.
 
I’m curious then,what would a 273,a 318 and a 360 with torqueflite get if driven normally? I’ve heard others say the V8’s do quite well if you keep your foot out of them
 
I’m curious then,what would a 273,a 318 and a 360 with torqueflite get if driven normally? I’ve heard others say the V8’s do quite well if you keep your foot out of them
I had a 71 Dart with a mild 360, 904 and 3.23 gears bump 20-22 when I drove like an old man, which wasn't often.
 
It was with a Thermoquad, of course. Headers and the Crane Magic cam.
 
With the mileage all are reporting, I can't see how a Feather Duster or Dart Sport Lite with a /6 and A833 OD could come close to the advertised 24 mpg city and 36 mpg highway.
 
With the mileage all are reporting, I can't see how a Feather Duster or Dart Sport Lite with a /6 and A833 OD could come close to the advertised 24 mpg city and 36 mpg highway.
I have called BS on the 24/36 several times
 
16-18 mpg, do a tune up adjust your valves, check your timing.

i get 20-22mpg mixed, but my motor is not stock, 9:5 compression 500avs dual manifolds 4 speed with 2.93 gears, 12 degrees initial 16 mechanical 22Vcan for a 50 total.
 
I daily drive my 73 Dart (Known as the Shart because Stretch has a Dart :D).

I live in a very rural area of upper Michigan so my daily commute is a combination of back roads and 2 lane highways with 55 M.P.H. being the max speed. Its about 25 miles to work with two small towns to slow down through. I average 21 M.P.G. back and forth to work and on a recent road trip (200 miles round trip on two lane highways) I averaged 29 M.P.G..

My car is a 225/904 with unknown gears, 4 wheel manual drums and 14 x 5.5" wheels. I rebuilt the carb, adjusted the valve lash, did a basic tune up, replaced all the vacuum lines and replaced the intake/exhaust gasket. I set the base timing at 12 deg. BTDC. I custom bent a 2 1/4" dual exhaust system with two cheap reverse flow "turbo" style mufflers. I made a new down pipe and installed a "Y" to split to the duels. I also set the wheel alignment at .5 deg. negative camber (both sides), as close to 3.0 deg. positive caster as I could get while keeping the camber at .5 negative, and set the toe at 1/8" in.
I have collected the parts required to convert it to a A833OD this winter. I just need to rebuild the transmission and find a flywheel. It will be interesting to see what the OD does to the fuel mileage.
I'm about the same as Stretch here. I have 40 mile commute that is primarily highway 60-75mph and the last few miles through town at 45-50mph. I average 25mpg. Whenever I drive across the state to see my parents I get 32mpg maintaining 70 the whole 180 miles. Car is a '74 Dart Sport. Engine itself is a stock, 30k mile survivor; has a header, dual 2.25" exhaust, Clifford intake with Weber 38 2bbl. Trans is the original A230, 2.73 gears, 27" tall tire. Took the timing from whatever the factory had it set at and turned it all the way up. Maybe one day I'll check where it is. Every car is different; my '76 Scamp that started me into these cars only got 16mpg. That one was an automatic car, unknown gear, stock tire height and almost 200k miles when I sold it. But, that one was a factory air car and it worked; 9-12mpg when I used the a/c. Obviously, I just drove with the windows down.
 
Every engine is different & all have a 'sweet spot'. It is quite possible to have a larger engine get better mileage than a smaller engine if the bigger engine is operating in it's most efficient range.
 
Well Elvis has left the building, but I'll join the fun anyway.:lol:

When I commuted to college, my '75 4 door Valiant got a pretty consistant 17 mpg in a mix of suburb, highway and city driving. It didn't really do better than that when I commuted to work, but that was at least somewhat attributable to the driver...

My '74 Nova with a worn 250 cid straight 6 got around 16 mpg...

A '68 Barracuda notchback /6 with a 225 got 21 mpg on the trip from Chambersburg Pa to North Jersey. Didn't get to drive it to work long enough to establish commuting mpg but it was better than my mid '70s a-bodies. A lot peppier too without the stupid OSAC.

(all of the above cars had automatic transmissions)
 
With the mileage all are reporting, I can't see how a Feather Duster or Dart Sport Lite with a /6 and A833 OD could come close to the advertised 24 mpg city and 36 mpg highway.
They didn't. I won't expound any further, but the slant 6 never got 30 plus. Somebody's poor at math if they say otherwise, I don't care who it is. They just are not that efficient.
 
16-18 mpg, do a tune up adjust your valves, check your timing.

i get 20-22mpg mixed, but my motor is not stock, 9:5 compression 500avs dual manifolds 4 speed with 2.93 gears, 12 degrees initial 16 mechanical 22Vcan for a 50 total.
Kind of off topic, but what was your strategy to get to 9.5:1? .100” off the deck and head?
 
I have a 1964 Valiant 170/3 speed/7 1/4, that was built for fuel economy. It will get upper 20's mpg. Problem I have is too much compression and too little cam. It is true 9.5 CR, and unless I have the timing "backed" up it pings. I need to work the distributer some more.
PS: I do not believe any factory stock slant six car got "real world" MPG of over 30 MPG. Upper 20's maybe.
 
but the slant 6 never got 30 plus.
I agree. They were hard to get 18-20.Now under the right circumstances yes they can do better.
For the average Joe, not us that tune to the nth-degree . Also terrain plays a part.
You live in the flat lands ? Mountains ? maybe just hilly ? Our 70 Dart 225 auto on a good day was 14 16 at most. That was in the hills of southern Pennsylvania .
 
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I get 17 mpg in my 72 FuryIII 360 2bl on cruise control set at 70mph original unrestoeed
I’m curious then,what would a 273,a 318 and a 360 with torqueflite get if driven normally? I’ve heard others say the V8’s do quite well if you keep your foot out of them
 
I have a 1964 Valiant 170/3 speed/7 1/4, that was built for fuel economy. It will get upper 20's mpg. Problem I have is too much compression and too little cam. It is true 9.5 CR, and unless I have the timing "backed" up it pings. I need to work the distributer some more.
PS: I do not believe any factory stock slant six car got "real world" MPG of over 30 MPG. Upper 20's maybe.

I had a 170, not stock, in a 64 Barracuda 4 speed that would get high 20's all day long on the highway. Probably hit 30 mpg a couple times. And I can do math.
 
I had a 170, not stock, in a 64 Barracuda 4 speed that would get high 20's all day long on the highway. Probably hit 30 mpg a couple times. And I can do math.
As you said "not stock". Mine is not stock either. I stated that I did not believe any stock slant six ever got "real world" over 30 mpg, and I stand by that statement.
PS: A 170 was not available in the barracuda from the factory. 225 was the "base" engine for the Barracuda, and 170 was base engine for the Valiant.
PPS: I had a 170 in my 66 Cuda, but I put it in. Removed a not running 360. Car was born with a 273 2bbl.
 
I saw that, I was just chiming in that 30 mpg was possible in a slant. My 170 was built for speed, don't laugh, and to try something different. I had just Built a 170 Ford for a friend in an early Falcon. My 170 replaced the HP 273, also not stock, when gas took a nose dive in the 70's or 80's. Probably came out of a Dart or Valiant, 3 speed manual. I kick myself for practically giving that 170 away in Baltimore, MD.
 
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