RV Help Center

Recreational Vehicle Information

Oct
18

We're making a movie and will drive the 5-man (actually, four men, one woman) crew to Hotlanta for the shoot. We'd like to know from any expert RV'ers out there in TV Land about how much we'd need to spend in gasoline from here to there (about a three-or-four-day trip in probably a rented RV from CruiseAmerica or some other RV rental place). And the size of the RV would be a pretty big one, I guess, if we're taking five peeps with us.

Oh, by the way, it would be about 6-8 days driving both ways, total.

LA to Atlanta must be around 3000 miles. Once you decide on an RV, check the mpg…Every RV will be different. Once you know the mpg, divide that into the distance to get the number of gallons. Then check to see if there is an average price around the country or if gasoline prices vary from west to east. Multiply the number of gallons by average price, and voila…your answer.

Nobody is going to be able to tell you any differently without knowing the key variables like mpg for the RV you select. Here's an example: 3000 miles driving; you select an RV that gives you 10 miles per gallon (mpg). So, that's roughly 300 gallons for level driving. When you go uphill or sit idly in traffic jams or go faster than the speed limit, you'll burn more gas for less mileage. Anyway, 300 gallons at 2 dollars per gallon is 600 dollars.

  1. October 18, 2008 at 06:05 am
    hotgurlz704

    can someone find me the song icecream and cake by the buckwheatboys please u can send it to my email hotgurlz704@yahoo.com
    References :

  2. October 18, 2008 at 06:11 am
    Angeljerk

    there isn't a way to really tell you unless you know what kind of gas milage the RV gets.
    Either way, get ready to empty your check book filling that thing up.
    References :

  3. October 18, 2008 at 06:59 am
    Thursdays

    500 - 1000. Just to be safe.
    References :

  4. October 18, 2008 at 07:34 am
    Pandak

    LA to Atlanta must be around 3000 miles. Once you decide on an RV, check the mpg…Every RV will be different. Once you know the mpg, divide that into the distance to get the number of gallons. Then check to see if there is an average price around the country or if gasoline prices vary from west to east. Multiply the number of gallons by average price, and voila…your answer.

    Nobody is going to be able to tell you any differently without knowing the key variables like mpg for the RV you select. Here's an example: 3000 miles driving; you select an RV that gives you 10 miles per gallon (mpg). So, that's roughly 300 gallons for level driving. When you go uphill or sit idly in traffic jams or go faster than the speed limit, you'll burn more gas for less mileage. Anyway, 300 gallons at 2 dollars per gallon is 600 dollars.
    References :

Blue Mechanics is designed by ChiQ Montes.
, , .