How do you figure engine hours to miles?
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03-26-2006, 09:41
Post: #1
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what
that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. Jon 1978 Wanderlodge Bremerton Washington |
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03-26-2006, 10:11
Post: #2
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Hi Jon,
Your 148,000 miles divided by 3460 hours shows that your coach has averaged 42.7 miles per hour over it's lifetime. That is considered in the normal range. Jack '87 FC 35 Franklin, NC [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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03-26-2006, 10:31
Post: #3
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary based on our
individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an additional piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting in an average of 41.3+ miles per hour. Neil Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com author@... My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. Jon 1978 Wanderlodge Bremerton Washington |
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03-27-2006, 02:15
Post: #4
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Jon,
148,000 miles divided by 3460 hours = 43 miles per hour sounds fairly reasonable to me. Hopefully the previous owner [s] held the speed around 60 to 65 on the interstate and 55 to 60 off the interstate. When you factor in the stop and go city driving 43 still sounds good to me. Howard Truitt Camilla, Ga. 86 8V92 PT40 ----- Original Message ----- From: Jon To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 26, 2006 5:41 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] How do you figure engine hours to miles? My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. Jon 1978 Wanderlodge Bremerton Washington ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS a.. Visit your group "WanderlodgeForum" on the web. b.. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: WanderlodgeForum-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com c.. Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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03-27-2006, 18:38
Post: #5
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Gentlemen,
A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH indicates it was started periodically but not driven. Andy Coleman May be a 83 FC-35 owner NJ --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary based on our > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an additional > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting in an > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > Neil > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > author@... > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > Jon > 1978 Wanderlodge > Bremerton Washington > |
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03-27-2006, 22:31
Post: #6
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
37.19 Average MPH based on 3272 hours/121695 miles for me.
frank 85FC33 --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Andy Coleman" > > Gentlemen, > > A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. > > I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. > By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. > > Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? > > The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH > indicates it was started periodically but not driven. > > Andy Coleman > May be a 83 FC-35 owner > NJ > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > > > > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary > based on our > > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an > additional > > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting > in an > > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > > > Neil > > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > > author@ > > > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > > > Jon > > 1978 Wanderlodge > > Bremerton Washington > > > |
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03-27-2006, 22:31
Post: #7
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
ok heres a good 1 then
my old fc has 147398 miles a 5124 hrs its a slow bus untill i changed the gears! woody fc rb 81 getting ready for maxton with a new look! --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Andy Coleman" > > Gentlemen, > > A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. > > I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. > By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. > > Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? > > The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH > indicates it was started periodically but not driven. > > Andy Coleman > May be a 83 FC-35 owner > NJ > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > > > > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary > based on our > > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an > additional > > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting > in an > > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > > > Neil > > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > > author@ > > > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > > > Jon > > 1978 Wanderlodge > > Bremerton Washington > > > |
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03-28-2006, 00:41
Post: #8
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
There may be another reason for the difference between the mileage
and the engine hours. The odometer part of the speedometer may be bad, that is may not accurately count. They are known to stick on the 1/10 digit. I would check it on the road for a couple of miles to see if that is a problem. tom warner Vernon Center,NY 1982 FC35 1985 PT40 At 02:38 AM 3/28/2006, you wrote: >Gentlemen, > >A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. > >I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. >By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. > >Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? > >The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH >indicates it was started periodically but not driven. > >Andy Coleman >May be a 83 FC-35 owner >NJ > > >--- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > > > > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary >based on our > > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an >additional > > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting >in an > > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > > > Neil > > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > > author@... > > > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > > > Jon > > 1978 Wanderlodge > > Bremerton Washington > > > > > > > > > >---------- >YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS > > * Visit your group > "<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WanderlodgeForum>WanderlodgeForum" on the web. > * > * To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > * > odgeForum-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com > > * > * Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the > <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/>Yahoo! Terms of Service. > > >---------- |
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03-28-2006, 06:29
Post: #9
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Andy,
There is a very likely possibility that older coaches could have a significate number of hours due to idling. Howard Truitt Camilla, Ga. 86 8V92 PT40 ----- Original Message ----- From: Andy Coleman To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 2:38 AM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Re: How do you figure engine hours to miles? Gentlemen, A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH indicates it was started periodically but not driven. Andy Coleman May be a 83 FC-35 owner NJ --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary based on our > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an additional > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting in an > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > Neil > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > author@... > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > Jon > 1978 Wanderlodge > Bremerton Washington > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS a.. Visit your group "WanderlodgeForum" on the web. b.. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: WanderlodgeForum-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com c.. Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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03-28-2006, 10:26
Post: #10
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How do you figure engine hours to miles?
Woody,
Thats because it sat in the Keys and never went for a walk... Looking to see the new look in Maxton... Sea Ya Larry Wannabe NYC rwoodysurplus my old fc has 147398 miles a 5124 hrs its a slow bus untill i changed the gears! woody fc rb 81 getting ready for maxton with a new look! --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Andy Coleman" wrote: > > Gentlemen, > > A very interesting discussion on engine miles vs. hours. > > I'm looking at an 83 FC-35 with 94,000 miles and 2,669 engine miles. > By dividing the two, I come up with 35.2 MPH during its lifetime. > > Is that a number that I should be concerned with? Is it too low? > > The coach may have sat for periods of time. Maybe this low MPH > indicates it was started periodically but not driven. > > Andy Coleman > May be a 83 FC-35 owner > NJ > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Neil & Pat LeKander > wrote: > > > > Jon, this is a very interesting question; no doubt it will vary > based on our > > individual driving style. We would all benefit from a discussion of our > > individual mileage/engine hours. That would give all of us an > additional > > piece of info to use in comparing vehicles. > > > > For my 1985 PT-36, I have 172,000 miles/ 4160 engine hours resulting > in an > > average of 41.3+ miles per hour. > > > > Neil > > Author, "The RVer's Ultimate Survival Guide" > > http://www.rvsafetyinfo.com > > author@ > > > > My engine hour meter reads 3460 hours and I would like to know what > > that would compute to miles driven if rig was on the road all its > > life? Right now the OD reads 148,000. > > > > Jon > > 1978 Wanderlodge > > Bremerton Washington > > > Yahoo! Groups Links --------------------------------- Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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