Zandcwhite
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Zach
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2019
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 8,305
- Reaction score
- 14,199
- Location
- Patterson, ca
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 jlur
Typical CO resident, forgets that the Sierra Nevada's existThe folks arguing this the most, rarely drive above sea level so I am not sure why they care. Those of us that live in Denver or above 6,000' don't notice because we are already at a much higher altitude and everything else we drive is as well. Going from 6,000 to 10,000' which is where the bulk of the trails are is a 15% or so further reduction. Once we get up there, we are generally going slow again and do not really notice the change. On the way up, the guys that want to go above 65 mph might feel it more (hard to do most of the time with the amount of cars on the road going over the pass).
Rarely does anyone immediately jump from a car at sea level into the same exact vehicle at 10,000'. You have to drive to the mountains so the reduction is more gradual. I drove the Jeep over Estes (11,500) on a Friday and then hooked it up to my RV and was in Brownsville (sea level) on Monday. Jumped in the Jeep and did a 100 mile drive. Then drove it regularly for the next month at sea level. I noticed the difference, but it was not night and day nor did it matter as everything else on the road was also at sea level and flat so the engine was never pushed. Furthermore, most places outside Utah and Colorado do not see really high elevations on a regular basis so the argument over which engine and how much loss should not matter to anyone else...
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