Worst means Dryver calculated the MPG correctly instead of calculating MPGe which factors all of the miles driven on electric into the equation. You jumped straight to easy mode so your worst numbers will blow that out of the water without question every time.![]()
This must be a typo, correct?
How to you go from these insane MPG's to that?
There's also a couple of important things to note here as well.
I'd love to see those numbers, were it differentiates the two types of driving commonly used in the 4XE's.
Nuff said!I work 10 miles from home...
...A diesel would be the worst choice for me because the majority of my trips are short...

Good, we agree that we each have the best vehicle for us. Perhaps you need to read the rest of my post because you're towing your own line of crap as well and cherry picking the rest. Peace!Nuff said!
I honestly didn't read anything else you said, because this is all that matters.
The 4XE is perfect for you, that's quite clear, though why you would mislead people with bullshit MPG numbers is beyond me. But then again that's the problem with a lot of 4XE owners. Honesty is not their best policy.
You should be more forthcoming with what kind of numbers you're actually getting and instead of telling people you're getting a hundred plus MPG, be honest tell them what you're actually getting, factor in your plugins, and provide us with a MPGe number, you'll see a lot less people giving you shit about it.![]()
And therein lies the problem. Maybe you should try making fun with the other owners.How am I towing a line of crap?
I've never lied about what my MPGs are like you have.
There's really no need to read the rest of what you wrote, again my issue with the 4XE community is there bullshit MPG numbers. So as long as you stop misleading people, we're cool.
This is a joke thread guy, I'm making fun of the 4XE guys, not joining them!![]()
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I'm still waiting for you to produce your real numbers...And therein lies the problem. Maybe you should try making fun with the other owners.
The rest of my post had mainly to do with operating costs, which are no worse than yours, and actually better in most cases, but perhaps that's what your real beef is? You bought into the diesel dream and found it's not all it's cracked up to be by the other owners? I can see how that could make someone bitter.![]()
That's funny. I admitted very plainly and clearly that my MPG highway number without electric was 21 mpg. You obviously weren't paying attention, which doesn't surprise me as your whole goal is self-serving.I'm still waiting for you to produce your real numbers...
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And that kids, is how you defeat a 4XE owner.
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They always start off with their bullshit misleading numbers, and when that doesn't get them the response they're looking for, they start throwing out cost numbers and going on the attack, all the while never producing the one thing which will defeat them, the truth!!
Sensible. It's the exact use case Jeep is banking on to make the Wrangler a sustainable product going forward and bring new owners in from outside the Jeep brand.I work 10 miles from home, so my typical day is no gas usage when it's warm and sunny when I'm driving. When it's dark and cold, the range suffers and I don't quite make the round trip entirely on electric, so use a bit of gas each day, hence the seasonal variation in my miles between fill-ups. When I get home, I plug in, walk the dogs, do a few chores, and can go another 20ish miles if we go out somewhere. On the weekends, I still generally stay within the electric range, but I do have occasional longer trips. The 4xe is perfect for my use.
Again, nailing the accuracy here on what the 4xe is good at and suffers with against the Diesel.The worst fuel mileage is a day when we made a trip to visit my wife's family, and yes, does reflect the true mpg when running on gas only. I would have been running about 80mph. If I dropped that by 10mph, it would be more like 23mpg. However, that is not my typical use case and is an outlier.
A diesel would be the worst choice for me because the majority of my trips are short. If I drove 100 miles round trip, it would be a much better choice for me, as it is for you.
I've had my 4xe 33 months and have 30,000 miles on it, so about 11k miles per year, really not too far off of your annual mileage.
Okay, now we're getting into the weeds. Your choice to run non-ethanol fuel isn't a bad thing but it does bring the fuel costs more in line with Diesel to a degree. Fuel costs can vary a ton based on location though. The lowest diesel in my area is $2.99 a gallon with the lowest UNL88 being $2.87 (according to my gasbuddy app at least) so the variation here is about .12 cents a gallon. If you run just mid grade with ethanol around here it's more like $2.57 a gallon so knock 30 cents off that if you wanna start really digging into numbers. A single canister of DEF runs about $20 so call it $40 to fill the tank completely to cover anywhere from 3000-5000+ miles before it needs a refill (again, there's a ton of variation here based on use case). Even at it's WORST case as suggested above, we're talking about just over a penny a mile in added cost. So, whats that make the average cost per mile? Negligible impact. We're talking an increase in annual fuel costs of $150 to run def in the worst case scenario. I could forgo a few trips for coffee and make that up in a heartbeat over the course of a year. Again, we're really digging to draw some kind of meaningful comparison here. Unless your electricity costs at the end of the year can really show a cost savings for the mileage you're doing annually vs straight gas, this is gonna be a real apples to oranges argument. There's no free lunch with PHEV's or EV's. That cost of not using gas/diesel is gonna be made up somewhere at some point during ownership. California is already finding that out the hard way. Ohio might not see it yet, but it'll happen eventually. We're already seeing it here in Colorado. No one's immune.Since it can take me a while to get through a tank of gas, I use non-ethanol. It's about as costly as diesel, but I don't have to use it. Call them both $4/gallon. If we both drove 15k per year, I'd be spending about $1200 less per year on fuel. Yes, I pay for electricity to make up the difference, but I haven't seen a huge impact there. What you aren't including in your cost to operate is DEF, so we could potentially call that a wash.
To recap, in city driving, you're paying for 21mpg + DEF and I'm paying for electricity. For highway driving, you're paying for 27mpg plus DEF and I'm paying for 21mpg, but I could be buying that gas for perhaps $1.00 cheaper than diesel. Cost per mile on highway? Perhaps $.18 for diesel and $.14 for 4xe on ethanol and $.19 for non-ethanol.
This is starting to open a real can of worms. Brakes might look brand new but the impact of using max regen affects other components wear and tear. I can tell you as I actually had a good look at the trans fluid on my 4xe after less than 9000 miles of use, it was already starting to look like it was going to need a drain and fill at around the 30k mile marker. I suggest you take a look at yours and see just how dirty it is in there. You might be surprised seeing as it's the same fluid we use.Let's talk brakes. Mine almost never get used because of max regen. They look new at 30k miles. How do yours look?
Let's talk engine. At 100k miles, I'll have an engine with perhaps 35k miles of use. Yours will have 100k. Diesels last longer, so maybe that's a wash too.
Battery? I might have to replace it some day, but my wife's 2102 Prius still had the original battery at 150k miles and it still gets 45-50mpg average. Different animal, but representative. Even if my electric range gets pathetic, I can still run as a regular hybrid.
Again, different strokes for different folks. I was one of you...twice. I'm not getting my pants in a wad over it. I just found out the hard way that having a Diesel in my life not only made more sense for my use case, it's a hell of a lot more practical from the maintenance side of things.The bottom line is that we both have Jeep choices that we believe work best for us and I think that's fantastic. What I don't understand is why you get so butt-hurt over the mere existence of a vehicle you don't want to own, but others find to be a great fit.
Small correction; Miles Per Gallon Equivalent. Sorry, just wanna make sure we keep the facts straight so the 4xe guys don't get twisted up over correcting us.MILES PER GALLON ELECTRIC (MPGe)