No sense in saying anything to this 23 year old it's obvious he knows all and done all. Anybody that can get 22 mpg with a 3.92 doing 80 mph must know something. Oh and 17 mpg towing 6k.
Wel, I have gotten 22 mpg in my 3.92 equipped truck....but it was @ 55, and not towing anything. Hand calculated, as the computer showed 22.9. Did it more than once too.
It appears you're right about the trailer brakes. I wonder though. Technically the trailer has brakes, but the truck didn't come with a brake controller, even though it's rated to tow that much. Technically you aren't pulling it without brakes.
This is just stupidity trying to be smart. If the brakes aren't hooked up to work, then they may as well not be there. Using 'words' to play on is just dumb.
It'd be liking laying in bed beside Kate Beckinsale while you **********, and then claiming you had sex with her cuz she technically was in the bed at the same time.
Anyway...this is what scares me more......
My point is that you can always be prepared.
That is simply not true. You can TRY & Be prepared, but you can never truly be prepared. Sometimes, stuff just happens, and you never expected it.
Example:
I was at work, and had on all my safety equipment and was doing my job by the book, when out of nowhere, a hose pressurized to over 1200 psi burst, and hit me in the chin, knocking me out and into the metal cabinets behind me. When I came too a couple of minutes later, I was kneeling in blood & water, and had a huge gash across my lower jaw/chin, and across the back of my head...both to the bone.
The hose was literally 12-14" from my face when it ruptured, and in the process, it ovalled out a 4" diameter stainless steel fitting, and threw the metal elbow that was attached to it and the now totally straight circular clamp holding it there across where I was standing, thru a stainless steel door, and 10-15' the other side of me. We are assuming the hose hit me, and not the fitting, as it likely would have killed me if it had.
I was in a narrow space, with maybe 3' between the cabinets behind me and the cabinet in front of me, and the pieces parts went thru that 3', at the same time I was there, and I ain't no little thing @ 300+ lbs myself.
So you can see where I was truly lucky that day...preparedness had little to do with it, altho my safety gear did save from worse potential injury. It almost immediately shut down all work for over a day while the investigation was conducted.
Investigation showed that the hose was improperly installed (capped so pressure could build up vice open for venting), and that the valve it was attached to was not correctly made, IE when it was shut & indicated shut, it was still actually 7% open, so it did not stop flow to the hose like it should have.
I am good now, but do have some nasty scar from that day.