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- Community Alumni
Learjet wrote:
I think I saw that truck June 11 on our way from Nashville, TN to Charleston, SC on the interstate. I remember because I thought how rare that had to be. Was that you? LOL
Nope, it wasn't me. I was in the middle of Texas then. They are rare, but seem to be getting more attention as a viable alternative to the diesel variant. The 6.4 Dually seems to be getting a lot of attention from the TC guys and gals. - Community Alumni
jerem0621 wrote:
I just want to say that your truck is beautiful. It’s a blessing to be able to have something that capable and nice.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
Thank you for the kind words. - LearjetExplorer
proxim2020 wrote:
I'm in a weird spot. For the weights that I'm pulling now and in the near future, I don't need a diesel. My packed weights on the TT are a usually 9k and I'm not pulling more than 13k with other trailers. However, for the weights I'm often carrying I need a dually.
I ended up with a 18' 6.4 Mega Cab Dually Laramie. It's a pretty rare truck and had to put in an order for it. I wanted a 4.10's, but it came with 3.73's. I'm doing fine with the 3.73 and not thinking of swapping gears. I'm coming up on the year mark and it's got a little over 24,000 miles on it. So far I haven't been disappointed with anything about the truck.
I think I saw that truck June 11 on our way from Nashville, TN to Charleston, SC on the interstate. I remember because I thought how rare that had to be. Was that you? LOL - jerem0621Explorer II
proxim2020 wrote:
I'm in a weird spot. For the weights that I'm pulling now and in the near future, I don't need a diesel. My packed weights on the TT are a usually 9k and I'm not pulling more than 13k with other trailers. However, for the weights I'm often carrying I need a dually.
I ended up with a 18' 6.4 Mega Cab Dually Laramie. It's a pretty rare truck and had to put in an order for it. I wanted a 4.10's, but it came with 3.73's. I'm doing fine with the 3.73 and not thinking of swapping gears. I'm coming up on the year mark and it's got a little over 24,000 miles on it. So far I haven't been disappointed with anything about the truck.
I just want to say that your truck is beautiful. It’s a blessing to be able to have something that capable and nice.
Thanks!
Jeremiah - RoyJExplorer
wnjj wrote:
Since the point of torque management is to save the drivetrain, wouldn’t the diesel have to be limited to the same as the gas is limited to (not counting the Aisin), at least at startup?
Hard to say, as we don't know what's the limiting factor.
For sure the 68RFE is stronger than the 66RE, and obviously the Aisin as well. But does the rest of the drivetrain pose a limit for the gas?
If the 11.5" AAM axle can stand more torque than the maximum output of the 6.4 HEMI, then the diesel would have a higher limit.
Does anyone know exactly how much the torque is limited in 1st gear on the Cummins? - parker_roweExplorerAlso a big difference between NA gas engines and turbo engines(diesel or gas) when you put a load on them.
Turbochargers respond to load (unless the computer stops them), so they have the ability to tow better.
A 350hp/400 gas engine and a 350/400 gas turbo engine may have the same raw acceleration at full throttle.
But hook a load to it or go up a hill, and the turbo will do better with less throttle opening. Boost will increase, increasing power, even at part throttle if you increase load.
I'm not sure if diesels are the same but I assume so.
That's why the ecoboosts do so well in towing tests. - dodge_guyExplorer IITM on gas motors comes from the drive by wire throttle body. When you floor it your only getting around 65% throttle opening from a dead stop, then it slowly ramps up from there. A tune will remove most of that!
- rhagfoExplorer III
ib516 wrote:
RoyJ wrote:
Normally, I always correct people on the "torque vs HP" argument - as it's hp that pulls you up grades, not torque.
However, this is one exception where the TORQUE of the Cummins allows it for the much higher tow rating. An important spec in tow rating is startability - ability to pull away from a steep grade.
Cummins / Aisin: 930 lb-ft x 3.75 (1st gear ratio) x 4.10 = 14,299 lb-ft rear axle torque. With 33" tire gives 10,400 lbs of tractive effort.
6.4 HEMI / 66RE: 429 lb-ft x 3.23 x 4.10 = 5,681 lb-ft axle torque. With 33" tire gives 4,132 lbs of tractive effort.
The gas engine has only 40% of the starting tractive effort of the Cummins!
This means even with a 15,600 lbs trailer (23,400 GVW), the 6.4 gets beat off the line by a Cummins / Aisin towing 30,320 lbs trailer (39,100 GVW).
Simple math tells us the HEMI can only start out on a 17.7% grade, while the Cummins can pull away from a 26.6% grade!
In real life, the Cummins would perform even better as its torque peak (1700rpm) is much closer to the converter stall than the HEMI (4000rpm).
Unfortunately, your calculation completely leaves out the fact that all modern high torque diesels in pickups with auto transmissions are equipped with the transmission saving TORQUE MANAGEMENT (torque reduction) feature in the lower gears. There's no way you're getting anywhere near 930 lb-ft in gear 1 and 2.
I have actually tested it. In the real world. I used my previous 6.4L Hemi/4.10 vs a friends 3500 SRW Cummins/3.42. The trucks were identical with the exception of the transmission (66RFE vs 68RFE), rear axle ratio, rear suspension, and engine. We did 0-60 mph towing his 14k 5er. Guess who was faster to 60 mph? My Hemi was.
Unsurprisingly, I was faster 0-60 empty as well. That only makes sense. Lighter truck, 4.10 gears, and more hp.
There is a big difference between a 3.42 and a 4.10. If the Cummins had a 4.10 results could be different. - wnjjExplorer II
RoyJ wrote:
ib516 wrote:
That's the first I've heard of TM on a 6.4L Hemi, got a link to a source? I'm not challenging you, just curious as I plan to buy another.
In any case, I think we can agree a diesel is a better choice when "how it performs when towing a heavy load" is the only parameter you measure the trucks' worthiness by. When you add in initial cost, short commuting driving, winter cabin heat in extreme cold, maintenance cost, payload, and a few other parameters, it's not so black and white.
I don't have OEM proof at this point, but safe to say every modern car has torque management. Maybe not necessarily de-rating the peak torque output like the diesels, but they'll delay torque ramp-up off the line.
Even assuming the 6.4 can put 100% of its torque off the line, the Cummins would have to be de-rated to 400 lb-ft to be as weak. And I highly doubt that! So that aside, can you think of any other reason Ram would lower the 6.4 towing capacity that much?
And just so you know, I'm a huge proponent of modern gas powertrains, ever since the 2007 diesel emissions nightmares. I've read nearly every one of your past towing experiences with the 6.4, and even stole your photos to prove to other the coil springs can handle pin weight just as well as leafs.
But I'm making one exception this time because I truly believe gas engines can match a diesel's off the line startability.
Since the point of torque management is to save the drivetrain, wouldn’t the diesel have to be limited to the same as the gas is limited to (not counting the Aisin), at least at startup? - carringbExplorerEven my V10 came with torque management. I turned it off. Guess what happened when I did WOT downshift to 1st gear? Twisted the pinion gear clean in half. Well not clean, since the internal half tried to exit through the bottom of the axle housing. And i also ran over the driveshaft with both the van and the trailer...
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