Good news: mileage. Bad news: seat
One day that was almost entirely interstate driving of over 500 miles, I averaged 36.4 mpg. For the entire trip, I averaged 32 mpg. These numbers are much better than I expected and I'm very pleased.
The bad news is that I had lower back pain after two hours of driving no matter what positions I put the seat in. I had to stop at several rest areas to do stretching exercises. Of course, the problem is my back, and I may have had the same pains in just about any car. However, I don't get pain in the captain's chair of my 1997 V8 Dodge van conversion. In that tripping vehicle, however, I get a wallet-busting 14 mpg.
Just some info.




You can try those memory foam/gel stuff they sell for amazon. Of course your mileage may varies on those products.
I am about to hop behind the wheel for a 17 hour/way trip, going to Google and YouTube search proper seating position in a car and hope I might just be sat in a position more condusive to shorter trips. If not I am going to be in for a world of hurt over xmas and after xmas. .
You can try those memory foam/gel stuff they sell for amazon. Of course your mileage may varies on those products.
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I drive long distances all the time and have 2 memories for my seats.
1 comfortable with recliner-like setting
2 front of the seat max raise and back adjusted to kitchen chair-like position.
Even the 2nd position doesn't feel comfortable at first, it helps with legs cramps I am getting after long hr behind the wheel.
Surprisingly the high chairs in my truck make better comfort on long run. They have high seats to start with and are wider, so I can change my position in wider range.
The only thing hard to deal is neck pain. You don't feel it bad while you drive, but next morning you feel it getting up from bed.
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