Led 67 wrote:
Desert Captain wrote:
I don't tow "heavy" with the V-10 in my 2012 24' Class C but am here to tell you that V-10 is an awesome brake on the often long downhills. It is as much a function of the 5 speed Torque Shift transmission as the engine. I can cruise down a 6+% grade for ten or twelve miles and never touch the brake pedal. All that is required is to shift into the "Tow Haul" mode which locks out the 5 gear/overdrive. This holds the coach at 50-55 at around 3,000 rpm and the best part is we are not burning a drop of fuel!
If you run into more hill than that simply down shift into third (thus eliminating 4th gear), and the rpm will climb but the coach will hold at around 40 to 50 and you are again not burning any fuel. You can get much the same effect on older models (that do not have the tow haul option), by locking out overdrive. You will never harm a V-10 by inducing 3,000 to even 5,000 rpm... they are built to do that.
Don't buy into the nonsense that you have to have a diesel to get effective, efficient engine braking. I always laugh when I pass a rig who has been riding their brakes so hard that I can smell them. It's just s a shame they don't know how to drive.
:C
Desert Captain your first paragraph interest me as it alludes to basically an electronic autoshift which also has the "Tow/Haul" option
and you also belive that no deisel can outbrake you...
Sorry charlie but I have ran both gas and deisel trucks with a standard transmission and, you just need to learn how to use the Engine, Trans, and Brakes all together without frying your brakes. :B
Oh Yeah I have also ran a semi across Black Mountain with No Jake Brake just using my engine,trans, and brakes...:B
Huh? Where did I ever say "no diesel can out brake me"? If you actually read my post yours makes no sense at all. :h I don't need to learn how as I am doing it right and will never fry my brakes thanks to the proper use of the engine and transmission. While manual transmissions are getting to be fairly rare one can certainly mimic the Torque Shift with the proper gear selection and the judicious use of the clutch. I think some folks are just intimidated when rpm climb and they miss out on the available performance both going up and down serious grades.
The V-10 is arguably the most popular engine out there when it comes to gas motorhomes as it works very well in that application. What I alluded to were the many folks that simply do not know how to correctly use the V-10/trans combo as it was intended. Many is the time I have passed such a rig at the side of the road needlessly reeking of overheated brakes. A simple read of the owners manual would solve most of their problems.
:C