โJan-27-2018 05:58 PM
โJan-30-2018 09:05 PM
lazydays wrote:
Since 2003 I've pulled different campers with a Ford 5.3l, Chevy 6.0l, Dodge V10, and Chevy 6.6l diesel. No way would I go back to gas. I've owned the diesel going on 7 years and have only put 42k miles on it so I very rarely use the truck. Mainly weekend driving and pulling the camper in the Summer. Cost of ownership means nothing to me or I wouldn't own a camper, boat, multiple cars, ect. Took my Dad who almost 70 when he finally realized that diesel was the way to go and he's on his second now.
โJan-30-2018 05:49 PM
โJan-30-2018 09:59 AM
โJan-30-2018 07:45 AM
โJan-30-2018 07:35 AM
โJan-30-2018 07:00 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
But given the available engines, the idea that a typical non-commercial diesel will outlast a gas engine by 2-3 times is just silly...
Of course, if you really are putting 500k miles on a pickup (maybe 50k/yr on the carnie circuit),
โJan-30-2018 03:01 AM
billypro93 wrote:
The biggest problem with the average gas truck on the lot is it's set up with gears that belong in a low rpm diesel truck, gas and diesel motor are two different animals and they need to be geared differently to be a good pulling motor. Gas motors are higher rpm motors and need lower gears (higher numerical numbers) to keep the motor in its power range just like a diesel needs higher gears to keep it in its power range. You will also find that a gas motor with lower gears will get better millage pulling and empty (if you keep our speed down empty) than one with higher gears because the motor doesn't have to work as hard also the running gear like the transmission will last longer because of less stress. Class A motor homes don't have this problem because they come with the right gears from the factory unlike trucks that you have beg a dealer to order one geared the right way because they all believe that higher gears mean better mileage. You have to remember that the newer generation gas motor are made to run at higher rpms compared to older ones. I have to LOL when I here someone say they would never pull with a gas motor again but when you question them they had a gas motor with high gears so it had to work its butt off to pull their trailer but the diesel just cruises along with the same gears and rpm but the gas motor was not in its power band like the diesel. We started RVing in 1978 and every used truck we bought before we started buying new I had to change the rear end gears to make them pull the intended load also keep a eye on the tire size because bigger tires raise the final gearing where the rubber meets the road.
โJan-30-2018 01:48 AM
โJan-29-2018 09:31 PM
valhalla360 wrote:DiskDoctr wrote:
Fuel savings are one thing, but when you consider a single diesel to outlast...maybe 2 or 3 gassers...Then you have $50k-$70k savings x 2 or x3 with perhaps $2k per year to keep the diesel parts fresh and not worn out.
So $50k every 5 years for a new gasser...buys a LOT of diesel, LOL.
Lots of other things to consider, but this is the one that attracted me to diesel the most. Longevity. Sure, nearly constant "something" needing done, but it's getting less and less expensive. Figure about $2k every 200k miles, with a $5k bump for a HD transmission upgrade ONCE for lifetime, depending on your truck.
Of course, you have to be okay with driving an older truck. Some people like to drive a new one every couple of years, though. To each his own :C
Again, as stated, they don't make gas engines for commercial trucks that last as long as diesels because there is no demand for the engine but that is fuel costs driving the process. Technologically, it can be done fairly simply.
But given the available engines, the idea that a typical non-commercial diesel will outlast a gas engine by 2-3 times is just silly. Gas engines routinely get 200-250k miles and that typically corresponds to around 20yrs. By that point other parts of the truck are failing and it's no longer cost effective to replace them.
Of course, if you really are putting 500k miles on a pickup (maybe 50k/yr on the carnie circuit), for less than the original cost of the diesel upgrade, you can have a new gas engine dropped in.
If you simply want a diesel and can afford it...go for it.
If you are pulling heavy beyond what the gas engines are rated for...go for it.
If you really want an exhaust break because you spend a lot of time in the mountains...go for it.
If you want a balanced comparison of which makes more sense...longevity is no longer a viable argument.
โJan-29-2018 08:05 AM
โJan-29-2018 07:50 AM
Taylor90 wrote:
I have some issues picking a suitable towing vehicle to haul a travel trailer. Gas vs diesel for towing a fifth wheel? Which one is better? Any suggestion?
โJan-29-2018 07:25 AM
valhalla360 wrote:dapperdan wrote:
The reason I say this is IF gasoline engines were superior to diesel why is it ALL the major truck manufactures are and have equipped their trucks with diesel motors for the last 50 years? You can easily get a million miles out of a diesel if maintained properly. Then there's the torque factor.
Dan
It's about fuel costs.
- Your average RV might do 2000 miles per year at 10MPG, so about 200gal or about $500/yr. If you cut fuel costs by 20%, that's a whopping $100/yr on a $10,000 engine upgrade.
- Commercial trucks frequently do 2000 miles per week at 6MPG towing much heavier loads, so about $675/wk. A 10% cost per mile fuel savings will result in around $3500/yr in fuel savings and they can easily justify the additional up front cost of a diesel. Go back 15-20yrs and the fuel savings was closer to 30-40% because it was cheaper per gallon and you got better MPG.
This is born out as you are seeing Natural Gas powered trucks because if you have easy access to it, it's cheap.
The durability of commercial diesel engines is because it's common for a big commercial truck to put in 500k+ miles. If you don't build an engine that can do that, the competition will beat you. By comparison retail vehicles are usually worn out by the time they hit 200-250k miles (30-40yrs ago it was 100-150k miles) so there is no point in building an engine that does a million miles. It just adds cost without any benefit to the buyer.
If there was demand for a "million mile" gas engine, it's not technologically hard to do but they don't do it because there isn't a demand.
โJan-28-2018 09:23 PM
dapperdan wrote:
The reason I say this is IF gasoline engines were superior to diesel why is it ALL the major truck manufactures are and have equipped their trucks with diesel motors for the last 50 years? You can easily get a million miles out of a diesel if maintained properly. Then there's the torque factor.
Dan
โJan-28-2018 09:10 PM
Jack Spratt wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
Define "Better" and tell us details about the 5th wheel.
With modern engines, the gas engines are good for 200-250k miles with minimal work and diesels are drastically more complicated with computer systems and electronic controls that are prone to failures.
So modern technology makes the gas engines better
But diesels less reliable?
โJan-28-2018 09:08 PM
DWeikert wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
It's a myth based on 40yr old technology that diesel will last longer.
Hmmm... If one engine needs to operate around 5000 RPM to pull a load while the other can do it at 2500 RPM, which do you think last longer?