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But i think the most basic thing which i don't think has been mentioned here is tire air pressure.I have been studying up over at the ecomodding forum. Its pretty common for those guys over there to overinflate their tires by about 5 psi. They say it gives you a small boost, while not really hurting the tire. They say that the old bias ply tires were the ones that were more prone to wearing funny when overinflated. Plus only going 5 PSI over doesn't do much harm anyway. But you gain a small percentage of MPG. Might be something I try out sometime.
I don't know if this helps anyone, but I'll throw this in the mix...My Dad had a '87 GMC R1500 350, 700R4 (don't know what rearend ratio) that he would usually get 20 mpg. Additionally; while driving the straight, flat highways on the high plains, his '96 GMC C2500 350, 4L80, 3.73 would 20 mpg. However, I rarely get over 14 mpg in my 2005 Chevy 2500, 4x4, NV4500 with 4.10's... And I've never got better than 12 mpg in either of my '70's GM trucks.