There are still legions of drivers who are not practicing even the most basic fuel-saving techniques. Just hang around an intersection with a lot of truck traffic and listen
Five Easy Ways to Reduce Fuel Consumption
There are still legions of drivers who are not practicing even the most basic fuel-saving techniques. Just hang around an intersection with a lot of truck traffic and liste

The basics of driving for better fuel economy include progressive shifting and taking advantage of downhill rides.
to how drivers go through the gears coming away from a traffic light, or visit a truckstop on a mild spring or fall evening and listen for the idling engines.
Here are five easy ways to reduce fuel consumption without investing a penny in additional technology.
The idea is to use the lowest engine revs possible in each gear during an upshift sequence. Unfortunately, many drivers remain convinced that the fastest way to accelerate is to take every shift well into the high-teen range - 1,800 rpm and beyond. You can actually accelerate faster by getting into a higher gear sooner, and that's best accomplished by using minimum engine revs for each gear change. Besides, what's the rush? It's a big truck, not a drag racer.
Shifts from first to fourth can be accomplished between 800 and 1,000 rpm. Revs will need to go slightly higher in high range, between 1,200 and 1,400 rpm. In the top two gears, they could maybe go as high as 1,600 rpm, depending on the engine and how the truck is geared.
The bottom line is, keep the revs low for better fuel economy. It's quieter and smoother, too.
There are a surprising number of fleets that have yet to embrace some form of auxiliary climate control, and drivers continue to idle their trucks for extended periods. The need is understandable in extreme temperatures, but even in moderate weather, idling is surprisingly common. Fleets that idle a lot can see idle ime numbers in the 40% to 50% range. That means for half the time the engine is on, it's idling and producing no value at all for its owner.
By contrast, Josh Kaburick, CEO of Earl L. Henderson Trucking, reports his trucks, equipped with ComfortPro and TriPak APUs, are averaging just 7% idle time. Every hour of idle time in a long-haul operation can decrease fuel efficiency by 1%.
If cold is a problem, try warmer blankets or a plug-in electric blanket or mattress pad. In warmer weather, try fans, window screens and lighter covers. Anyone who can afford to idle a big diesel when it's 40 degrees outside is making way too much money.
With or without all the latest aerodynamic gizmology, the faster a truck goes, the more fuel it consumes. According to Cummins, at speeds above 55 mph, each 1 mph increase in vehicle speed decreases fuel economy by 0.1 mpg. Providing you have the latitude in your rear ends, reducing road speed can reduce fuel consumption substantially.
Traveling more slowly offers the added advantage of allowing other traffic to go screaming past your truck. That means you'll spend more time at optimum cruise speed and less time on the brake pedal adjusting to traffic flow. There's truth in the old adage that slow and steady wins the race. Be the tortoise, not the hare.
A downhill ride is a free ride. Forget for a moment that it took a little extra fuel to get up the hill. You want to use the momentum of the downhill ride to help you up the next hill. Applying brakes will rob the truck of some of that momentum, so it becomes a delicate balance for the driver to let the truck roll out on the hill without exceeding speed limits or running too fast for conditions.
The key is in cresting the hill at something less than full speed and using gravity on the downhill side to gain that speed back.
Cruise control has one purpose in life: to maintain the set speed. It will maintain speed over hill and dale, provided it's within the power of the engine, the gradeability of the powertrain, etc. Sometimes a downshift is required, at which point cruise is sometimes disengaged and sometimes not. Modern cruise systems have something called "droop" built into them that allows for a reduction in road speed without the system making a full-power stretch to gain that speed back.
A driver can also provide some droop by disengaging the cruise control near the crest of the hill and feathering the throttle pedal as the truck goes over the top. It's OK to give up a few mpg at the top because you'll regain it going down.
From the June 2012 issue of HDT
More Fleet Management

How Fleets Can Avoid Equipment Blind Spots in Disaster Response
When the unexpected happens, how you react to, and deal with operational blind spots is critical. Here’s how to keep you recovery on track, when nothing is normal.
Read More →
AI Security Risks for Trucking Fleets: What to Know About Deepfakes and Agentic AI
As fleets adopt artificial intelligence for routing, maintenance, and load matching, new security risks are emerging. Learn where the vulnerabilities are and how to put the right controls in place.
Read More →
FMCSA’s Motus System Is Coming. What Fleets Need to Know Now
The long-awaited registration system promises a single portal — and tighter fraud controls.
Read More →
Cargo Theft Incidents Fall in Q1, but Organized Crime and Impersonation Drive New Risks
CargoNet reports fewer supply chain crime events to start 2026. But losses hold steady as organized crime shifts tactics toward impersonation schemes and high-value goods.
Read More →
Nominations Open for HDT Truck Fleet Innovators 2026
Heavy Duty Trucking is searching for forward-looking leaders at trucking fleets as nominations for HDT’s Truck Fleet Innovators 2026. Deadline is May 15.
Read More →
New Trojan Driver Cargo Theft Scam Bypasses Carrier Vetting Systems
Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.
Read More →
March Truck Tonnage Posts Strongest Annual Gain Since 2022
A modest sequential increase capped the strongest quarterly performance in years, signaling continued freight momentum in early 2026.
Read More →
Ohio Turnpike Targets $5.2 Million in Unpaid Tolls from Trucking Firms
More than 300 carriers across 26 states have been sent to collections as the Ohio Turnpike cracks down on toll evasion and delinquent payments.
Read More →
'Beyond Compliance,' Regulations, Driver Coaching on ATRI’s 2026 Research List
The American Transportation Research Institute will examine driver coaching, regulatory impacts — including the "Beyond Compliance" concept —and weather disruptions that shape trucking operations.
Read More →
Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis on the Growing Need to Replace Old Trucks
Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis says it's time for fleets to get back to the fundamentals of good maintenance practices. And that includes replacing older, inefficient equipment.
Read More →
