83 C20, 350 V8, CA, Fuel Economy

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

mistaake

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 20, 2015
Posts
651
Reaction score
18
Location
SF Bay Area, California
First Name
Michael
Truck Year
1999
Truck Model
Crown Vic
Engine Size
4.6
What type of gas mileage would a properly running C20 with those specs get? I'm not sure what gear ratio or transmission, but I'm assuming 4:10 and TH400?

Could I regear for better fuel economy, especially on the highway? I guess going to something like 3:73, 3:42, 3:08, etc. if it's even possible, would help a lot. How would that affect driving performance and fuel economy?
 

CSFJ

-----------------
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2014
Posts
6,160
Reaction score
5,170
Location
------
First Name
-------------
Truck Year
-------
Truck Model
-------
Engine Size
-------
I don't have any hard numbers on my truck. It's an '87 v(k)20 with the TBI 350, a 700R4 and 3.73 axles, and the fuel gauge still goes down pretty fast. I'm not sure how high you can go as far as re-gearing a 3/4 ton axle.
 

fussfeld

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 25, 2013
Posts
340
Reaction score
54
Location
east coast
First Name
j
Truck Year
83
Truck Model
c-10
Engine Size
4.3 v-6 262CID
Here's an interesting read concerning RPM and mpg:

http://www.oldsmobility.com/old/carlife_apr67.htm

If it's a c-20 then you have a 14 bolt rear? (not sure) If so, i think the highest you can go is 3.23 (pretty sure).

There are so many variables. How much driving do you do per week?
 

Slick_james187

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2014
Posts
77
Reaction score
6
Location
Redding, Ca
First Name
Darren
Truck Year
1977
Truck Model
Suburban c10
Engine Size
454, 7.4L
Id say a safe guess is around 12 or 13. Dont know about the trucks, but in suburbans 454s seem to get better mileage than the 350s. My 77 burb bone stock with ca smog gets about 15 at 50-55 mph with 4:10 gears
 

HotRodPC

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Joined
Aug 29, 2010
Posts
47,128
Reaction score
9,299
Location
OKC, OK
First Name
HotRod
Truck Year
85 K20 LWB
Truck Model
Silverado
Engine Size
454 - Turbo 400 - 3.73
In the full float rear ends, they jump from 3.73 to 3.21, so looking to hurt your towing capacity but reduce rpms and maybe improve mpg the rare hard to find 3.21 is your option in the 14b Full Float. If you have the 14b Semi Float which you probably do if it's small block truck, then the 3.42 is an option in the Semi Float. I sold the 14b Semi Float 3.21 out of my C20 and installed a 14b Semi Float 3.42 axle I had out of the 85 wrecked C20 out at my dads. If I keep the truck, I'm probably going to go back to a Full Floater that I have with a 3.73 ratio and be selling this Semi Float 3.42. Sadly, Cali is wayyyyy to far away from OK to make that happen for you.

FYI, when I had the 3.21's in the C20 with an OEM 454, on the freeway at 65mpg for a round trip to my dads at 140 miles, I got 13.2 mpg and that's the best I ever got and the odometer was accurate to a nats ass. Not sure what you get now, but there you go. 14 avg highway is probably your best case scenario with a carbed engine. I only got about 9 - 10 in the city with the 3.21's. City is probably not going to change. Highway might improve a little and the motor won't scream as bad, but you're also going to notice some struggling during towing with the 3.21's vs 4.10's.
 

highdesertrange

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2013
Posts
1,066
Reaction score
211
Location
kalifornia
First Name
mike
Truck Year
1978
Truck Model
k30
Engine Size
454
if you plan your trip right so you are always going downhill you might get 15. but seriously I would say 12 mas o menos. remember over 55mph is what kills your mpg. highdesertranger
 

mistaake

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 20, 2015
Posts
651
Reaction score
18
Location
SF Bay Area, California
First Name
Michael
Truck Year
1999
Truck Model
Crown Vic
Engine Size
4.6
if you plan your trip right so you are always going downhill you might get 15. but seriously I would say 12 mas o menos. remember over 55mph is what kills your mpg. highdesertranger

While Earth is round, I don't think going downhill all the time is always possible. Only half the time :D

In the full float rear ends, they jump from 3.73 to 3.21, so looking to hurt your towing capacity but reduce rpms and maybe improve mpg the rare hard to find 3.21 is your option in the 14b Full Float. If you have the 14b Semi Float which you probably do if it's small block truck, then the 3.42 is an option in the Semi Float. I sold the 14b Semi Float 3.21 out of my C20 and installed a 14b Semi Float 3.42 axle I had out of the 85 wrecked C20 out at my dads. If I keep the truck, I'm probably going to go back to a Full Floater that I have with a 3.73 ratio and be selling this Semi Float 3.42. Sadly, Cali is wayyyyy to far away from OK to make that happen for you.

FYI, when I had the 3.21's in the C20 with an OEM 454, on the freeway at 65mpg for a round trip to my dads at 140 miles, I got 13.2 mpg and that's the best I ever got and the odometer was accurate to a nats ass. Not sure what you get now, but there you go. 14 avg highway is probably your best case scenario with a carbed engine. I only got about 9 - 10 in the city with the 3.21's. City is probably not going to change. Highway might improve a little and the motor won't scream as bad, but you're also going to notice some struggling during towing with the 3.21's vs 4.10's.

Yeah, the fuel used to make the road trip out there would nullify any possible fuel savings by fitting a different ratio rear end. Thanks though :)

I would be happy with 13-14MPG. It's better than my Yukon which gets 10-13.
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
44,167
Posts
950,746
Members
36,282
Latest member
Doug Hampton
Top