Mischief Managed
Lieutenant Commander
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2005
- Messages
- 1,928
Also at a place like Lake Powell where places to buy gas are few and far between, you want to conserve as much as possible. The first time I was there with this boat, I ran around all week at a fairly low speed thinking I was conserving fuel when actually, I could have been going much faster to get better MPG.
I see people do that around here when gas prices peak. They'll run I/O runabouts at 10 to 15 MPH instead of 25 to 30 MPH thinking they are saving gas, but they are using almost twice as much per mile.
A fuel flow meter can save you a lot of money if you boat often. I cover about 1000 to 1500 miles and use 400 to 600 gallons in a typical a season in my boat. I can easily save 10% on fuel by carefully trimming and running at optimum speed based on real-time MPG measurements and the flow meter paid for itself in less than two years. I've had the flow meter for 7 years now and it's saved me 350+ gallons of gas. I think I paid $250 for it with the flow and speed sensors. I love that it's an ultra-accurate gas gauge too, that lets me keep my 74 gallon tank only filled with 50 gallons for the start of a typical day out, and the weight savings (150 lbs or so) of that alone saves gas and makes the boat perform better.