โOct-25-2016 08:38 AM
โOct-27-2016 08:43 AM
Hudsoner wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:Mile High wrote:
Let's not give the guy illusions! There is simply nothing true about that last statement.
I pass so many diesel coaches that I have lost count. I can cruise all day at 75 and most diesels camp in the right lane doing 55 to 65. I know my gas coach will top at 84 when the ECM prevents it from going any faster. The Ford V-10 has plenty of power for any roads that you may travel on as long as you keep the gross combined weight within specs.
I am like you! I have yet to see a diesel coach of the same or similar size as mine is (31') that can keep up with me, be it on the flats or in the western mountains.
Is there a general consensus on coach weigh where the engine no longer seems acceptable, and most people would wish they went with the diesel engine coach?and so this is my consensus on this matter
โOct-27-2016 08:36 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:Mile High wrote:
Let's not give the guy illusions! There is simply nothing true about that last statement.
I pass so many diesel coaches that I have lost count. I can cruise all day at 75 and most diesels camp in the right lane doing 55 to 65. I know my gas coach will top at 84 when the ECM prevents it from going any faster. The Ford V-10 has plenty of power for any roads that you may travel on as long as you keep the gross combined weight within specs.
โOct-27-2016 08:30 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:Mile High wrote:
Let's not give the guy illusions! There is simply nothing true about that last statement.
I pass so many diesel coaches that I have lost count. I can cruise all day at 75 and most diesels camp in the right lane doing 55 to 65. I know my gas coach will top at 84 when the ECM prevents it from going any faster. The Ford V-10 has plenty of power for any roads that you may travel on as long as you keep the gross combined weight within specs.
โOct-27-2016 07:57 AM
Mile High wrote:
Let's not give the guy illusions! There is simply nothing true about that last statement.
โOct-27-2016 07:10 AM
โOct-27-2016 04:35 AM
โOct-27-2016 04:27 AM
jlud wrote:
Plus maintenance is cheaper for now...I can get a full new engine put in later if I need it for much less than an upgrade.
โOct-26-2016 04:52 PM
โOct-26-2016 01:40 PM
fortytwo wrote:
I have owned 4 v-10's.
2000 35' Rexhall with full BANKS. Went over every pass in the Rockies pulling a Jeep Cherokee, CGVW 25,500 and always at that or over. Down to 20mph at 11,000 feet in 1st gear, but no problems pulling the load anywhere. Averaged 7.75 mpg over 130,000 miles.
2004 24' BT Cruiser pulling same Cherokee. Drove like a sports car, but the house part was a POS that defied fixing. Drove it a month and went back to the Rexhall, which I fortunately hadn't disposed of.
2010 28- Coachmen Freelander on 14,000 chassis with 2008 V-10 towing an Odyssey van. Plenty of power, but handling marginal. Average mpg 7.1. DW didn't like the layout and traded after 2 years.
2014 Itasca Sunstar 30T on 18,000 chassis towing the Odyssey van, CGVW 23,000. The rear end ratio is a pathetically poor match with the 5 speed tranny and the programming of the engine computer. On the slightest rise in the road cruise control will shift from 5th down to 2nd in about 2 seconds going from 1850 rpm to 4400. Installed the 5 Star tuning. Some improvement, particularly in the 5 to 4 downshift with most small grades staying in 5th or 4th. On steeper grades the shift from 4th to 2nd has only a 1/2 second stop in 3rd. However this only happens at speeds of 64-65. At speeds of 58-62 the downshifts occur much earlier and the downshift to 3rd only creates an additional 200 rmp instead of the 500 it should (if I add additional fuel via the gas pedal rpm will increase by 500 and the tranny will stay in 3rd until the grade steepens substantially. Think this is a 5 Star programming problem and will be contacting them when I get the stick house under control. Just returned from 5 months, 9600 miles on the road. Mpg before 5 Star; 6.75 over 5,079 miles. After 5 Star; 6.82 over 4,555 miles. Power is good, but not as good as the 2000 V-10 with BANKS. Think most of that is the tranny/rear end ratio and engine tuning issue. The the gearing of the 18,000 chassis does not enable the V-10 to turn high enough to pull the load on even modest grades until the downshift to 2nd. Driving manually with the 5 Star package the shift points can be pretty well controlled.
Added the Safe-T-Steer to the 30T but handling was only slightly improved, and remains bordering on dangerous with winds/crosswinds of 25mph or more.
โOct-26-2016 11:42 AM
โOct-26-2016 10:13 AM
โOct-26-2016 09:23 AM
wredman wrote:Performance when discussed on here is very subjective and what is acceptable to one is not acceptable to another. When I first joined the forum 11 years ago many would post times it would take to climb certain grades like the grapevine after various mods they made. Not being familiar with some of there grades I decided to use 40-60 mph tests on a flat road to compare performance. I figured you will always be going at least 40 mph when you approach a grade. The MH that has the best performance on the flat will do the best on a hill. So I would compare HP to wt ratios to narrow your search , look at gear ratios and then test drive from 40 to 60 at WOT and compare the times. What I have found is most larger DP's that I tested had times of 18 or more secs. I test drove a 34 ft DP that took 22 secs. Mid size gas 35-36ft were about 16 secs and short gas 30-32 ft about 12 secs. So if your current MH for example is a older 454 with 230 hp and is 34 ft and does 18 secs a newer Ford with 362 HP in a 37 ft MH maybe about the same or lower do to the increased HP. Unlike gas MH's DP's have less HP as they get shorter and lighter. I'm sure an automotive eng can do this just by comparing specs but this simple test helps me to compare various MH's that I have looked at.
Since this seems to be the primary gas engine for motorhomes, and all applications are the same engine and power. Is there a general consensus on coach weigh where the engine no longer seems acceptable, and most people would wish they went with the diesel engine coach?
I know its subjective, and depends on the hills typically driven and we can all learn to accept the slow lane :). It just surprised me that all of these different weight coaches have the same engine.
โOct-26-2016 08:49 AM
mike brez wrote:wredman wrote:
how do you dry out the jeep after you launch the boat?
The jeep has rubber grommet plugs in the floor. Remove them and take it for a ride. :B
โOct-26-2016 08:14 AM
mike brez wrote:vjstangelo wrote:
Nice set up to timmac. Curious as to why you trailer the Wrangler and not tow 4 down.
Most likely so he can bring the boat along.