Hi folks,
I emailed, then called Inmotion today to chat with them a bit to understand the difference between the ECO-tune and the stage 2 tune. Here is the email response:
Quote:
The Eco-tune provides the best fuel mileage gains in stop and go "in
town" driving only. On the freeway the Eco-tuning will provide no gains or
in some cases less fuel mileage then stock. For maximum freeway gains the
Stage-2 is the tuning you will want to use. To provide the maximum fuel
mileage with any tuning it is very important that you not only accelerate
very gently but you drive at or below the posted speed limits with the
cruise control on.
Per our phone conversation, here is what I understood. For city driving, leaning the fuel helps as not as much fuel is burned under load as you accelerate from a stop repeatedly. On the highway, the leaning means that a bit more right-foot is needed to maintain a speed against wind resistance, and therefore it burns a bit more fuel. I'm not quite sure I understand why leaning wouldn't still mean reduced fuel usage on the highway. My intuition feels that the right foot may go down more, but this is expected since the pedal puts less fuel in the engine, and it still ought to work out to an overall reduction (or perhaps no reduction depending on how the engine maintains a closed-loop feedback). However, my background is primarily with gas-burners (patooie!) and I suppose the dynamics of modern diesel engines may be different.
Anyway, just wanted to pass along the results of my questioning. For those of you looking to take some sting out of the pump prices, I hope this helps you make your decision.
- Chris