Switching to winter diesel AND losing the T-stat can lead to a 4mpg fuel loss. The winter diesel is worth about 2mpg (several variables here) and the T-stat is good for another 2mpg. If temps are dropping and have stayed low, you may also want to check your tire temp.
Lastly, this is a electric sucking beast until it is fully hot in cold climes. Think about the morning commute:
1.) cold start
2.) lights on (dark now)
3.) defrost if frosty (A/C in front and electric heat in rear)
4.) electric fuel heater
5.) viscous/friction/fuel-sucking heater for the humans in the cab
6.) glow plugs staying on until the computer is happy (long after your little light goes out)
In the winter, I recharge the battery if my driving stems from repeated short commutes.
Singularly, not a problem, collectively it is a mileage sucking weight around the Libby's neck. Here are few things to consider to help (but not fully cure the problem).
1.) Park it in the garage with the garage door DOWN (venting a little, this took some sever spousal training/coaxing)
2.) Plug in the block heater. Consider a timer, it likely on needs a couple of hours to do what it needs to do (garage dependent

)
3.) Get the ECO Tune from GDE, they have limited some of costs incurred from 4,5,&6 (I think)
4.) Crack the window instead of using defroster. The Bi-level or panel setting do not turn on the A/C compressor but the floor and defrost modes do (even if the button is not pushed in)
5.) Monitor you fuel location and associated mileage, some are different and the difference may vary by season.
There are other hyper-miler suggestions and I'll let those folks chime but these are little tips I use. Get the T-stat fixed, if you're close to 100,000miles, you may as well do the timing belt.
Good luck and welcome aboard,
Boilermaker2
_________________
2005 CRD Sport - "Blackie"
Tow Package
Trac Loc
GDE EcoTune w/ unl torque
Goodyear Wrangler SilentArmor Tires
over 192,000+ miles
100k mile service performed
5V Glow Plugs Installed and ECM updated
