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Fuel Mileage Problems

Drake

New Member
TTC Chicks
Hi everyone,

I live in Las Vegas, NV and 2 weeks ago I bought a 1994 4runner (3.0, auto, 4x4) from a private party down in Phoenix, AZ. I thought it was a great purchase being completely stock (it was always a wife's vehicle) and had only 145,000 miles on it. Aesthetically it was taken very good care of however now since I've owned it I'm questioning the general maintenance that was done on it. I've had one hell of a week with it . . .

Last Wednesday my battery died on me (living in the desert I'm used to this so no big deal, I got a new one)
Driving the truck back from Phoenix and for my next 2 gas fill ups in Las Vegas I was averaging 17.5mpg (calculated by trip odometer and amount of gas needed to fill the tank and doing the math). Around Tuesday/Wednesday (started before the dead battery) I noticed the needle on the fuel gauge dropping very quickly. Fuel mileage dropped to 10ish mpg. No smoke of any color coming from exhaust and no puddles under the truck. Next tank of gas dropped all the way to 7mpg. So Saturday while I was working my boyfriend started to look into it and found the distributor very loose under the hood and the timing WAY off, he said it was so far off he couldn't even measure it. He adjusted the timing and tightened down the distributor. We also changed the fuel filter just because it was never done and thought might as well. After looking over the entire fuel system there is still no visible sign of leaks.
Monday rolls around and I had a tire blow out on the freeway. It didn't damage the truck (or me) thankfully but definitely added to my bad luck streak. I guess it should be noted that I checked all tire pressures and tires when I replaced the battery and though they were aged and had some uneven wear I assumed they had about another 6-8 months on them before being in the red. I replaced the old tires (honestly don't even remember what brand/type they were but they were more typical small SUV passenger tires) with BF Goodrich All Terrains.
Last night my AC started to go out, I'm hoping just low on frion, so this morning I am at Firestone getting an alignment because of the uneven tire wear and the AC recharged and this is where I'm writing this post.
After replacing all of the above, this morning before Firestone I went to fill my truck up again (we filled it immediately after the distributor/timing/fuel filter fix so this tank of gas is completely used after that fix and a Chevron Techron fuel injector cleaner additive was added to the tank) and this tank averaged 12.5mpg. Still no visible leaks, no puddles, and no smoke coming from the exhaust.

Can someone please help offer some advice as to which direction I need to look toward next? I'm thinking maybe spark plugs? I'm definitely not fluent in vehicle mechanics but I do have some basic knowledge of how it all works. I blame me getting my civil engineering degree instead of mechanical engineering, too bad I didn't pay more attention in thermodynamics. Excuse the rambling, just bored waiting from my alignment to be finished. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
 

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tibadoe

Moderator
Staff member
1000 Posts
Community Leader
.........................Can someone please help offer some advice as to which direction I need to look toward next? I'm thinking maybe spark plugs? I'm definitely not fluent in vehicle mechanics but I do have some basic knowledge of how it all works.......................Any advice is greatly appreciated!
This is just my advice. I do it to every used vehicle purchase. Since you don't know exactly what maintenance was performed and when, I would automatically perform these services if they apply to your vehicle:

Change all fluids including engine oil & filter, Transmission oil, Transfer case & differential oils.
Tune up including spark plugs, timing check, and fuel filter, and a good fuel treatment shock.
Change all belts & hoses.
Check brakes & tires - replace if necessary.

This way you get a good grasp on doing basic PM work on your new ride. Plus it gives you a maintenance starting point where you know from this point on all oil & filters are fresh, no dry rotted rubber, belts, or tires. I have found that some people don't follow the recommended weights when changing oils. Proper coolant mixture or incorrect coolant type can also cause problems down the road.. Anyway, these services may prevent or reduce some unpleasant breakdowns down the road..
 
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