โSep-08-2016 05:30 PM
โSep-11-2016 03:50 PM
randallb wrote:
usersmanual,
YOU should have a bit of knowledge before you call BS on anyone. I spent 4 years servicing 500CI cylinder heads on a NHRA Nitro Funny Car. Trust me when I tell you the stems are 90 degrees to each other.
โSep-11-2016 03:43 PM
randallb wrote:
usersmanual,
YOU should have a bit of knowledge before you call BS on anyone. I spent 4 years servicing 500CI cylinder heads on a NHRA Nitro Funny Car. Trust me when I tell you the stems are 90 degrees to each other.
โSep-11-2016 02:04 PM
โSep-11-2016 11:31 AM
10forty2 wrote:
You guys looking to put your RVs on the drag strip? :B J/K with ya!
Not sure WHY Dodge has never gotten into the RV game, and why GM got out of it. But, everything I've ever read about the Triton V10 is positive...well, except for those few years that they didn't put enough threads in the spark plug holes....
Just remember, though...horsepower gets you to the end of the track faster, but torque is what makes it FEEL good getting there!
โSep-11-2016 09:15 AM
chaffeekid wrote:
The ford v10 is a high revving engine, and is 6.8 Liters
The big Chevy is 8.1 Liters, big difference. Loved the workhorse and Chevy in our 2002 Pace Arrow. And, yes I know all about the brake problems thanks.
โSep-11-2016 07:57 AM
usersmanual wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:usersmanual wrote:
you missed the point completely. WORKHORSE choose the brake system and installed and sold it to you. Therfore the recall was a workhorse recall and their responsibility to make sure all the workhorse owners were contacted
Most owners, myself included, never had any brake problems. Maybe it was because we used our coaches, or because we flushed out the brake system, like we have always done on our RV brakes. In any case, to me it was a minor issue that WORKHORSE took care of. Problem solved now it's old history.
Here is a place that can give you all of the power you will need for a Workhorse chassis. Performance engines
there were only certain models that required the retro fit recall but at the time it was a big recall. Lack of flushing and usage were not the reason of the recall. but good ideas to uphold
I know that bosch claimed active use would reduce caliper failure but that's a bunch of BS they flat out made the calipers with the wrong tolerances using a Bakelite piston
โSep-11-2016 07:29 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:usersmanual wrote:
you missed the point completely. WORKHORSE choose the brake system and installed and sold it to you. Therfore the recall was a workhorse recall and their responsibility to make sure all the workhorse owners were contacted
Most owners, myself included, never had any brake problems. Maybe it was because we used our coaches, or because we flushed out the brake system, like we have always done on our RV brakes. In any case, to me it was a minor issue that WORKHORSE took care of. Problem solved now it's old history.
Here is a place that can give you all of the power you will need for a Workhorse chassis. Performance engines
โSep-11-2016 07:15 AM
usersmanual wrote:
you missed the point completely. WORKHORSE choose the brake system and installed and sold it to you. Therfore the recall was a workhorse recall and their responsibility to make sure all the workhorse owners were contacted
โSep-11-2016 07:02 AM
J-Rooster wrote:usersmanual wrote:Yea right! My water hose broke under my kitchen sink last week due to a faulty lock ring by Phifister and I'm to blame the builder of my house! Nice try I'm not buying it!J-Rooster wrote:chaffeekid wrote:The brake problems were caused by Bosch suppling RV manufactures with bad calipers! The brake problems were caused by Bosch!
The ford v10 is a high revving engine, and is 6.8 Liters
The big Chevy is 8.1 Liters, big difference. Loved the workhorse and Chevy in our 2002 Pace Arrow. And, yes I know all about the brake problems thanks.
still a workhorse problem any way you look at it
โSep-10-2016 11:36 PM
usersmanual wrote:Yea right! My water hose broke under my kitchen sink last week due to a faulty lock ring by Phifister and I'm to blame the builder of my house! Nice try I'm not buying it!J-Rooster wrote:chaffeekid wrote:The brake problems were caused by Bosch suppling RV manufactures with bad calipers! The brake problems were caused by Bosch!
The ford v10 is a high revving engine, and is 6.8 Liters
The big Chevy is 8.1 Liters, big difference. Loved the workhorse and Chevy in our 2002 Pace Arrow. And, yes I know all about the brake problems thanks.
still a workhorse problem any way you look at it
โSep-10-2016 06:41 PM
J-Rooster wrote:chaffeekid wrote:The brake problems were caused by Bosch suppling RV manufactures with bad calipers! The brake problems were caused by Bosch!
The ford v10 is a high revving engine, and is 6.8 Liters
The big Chevy is 8.1 Liters, big difference. Loved the workhorse and Chevy in our 2002 Pace Arrow. And, yes I know all about the brake problems thanks.
โSep-10-2016 06:19 PM
chaffeekid wrote:The brake problems were caused by Bosch suppling RV manufactures with bad calipers! The brake problems were caused by Bosch!
The ford v10 is a high revving engine, and is 6.8 Liters
The big Chevy is 8.1 Liters, big difference. Loved the workhorse and Chevy in our 2002 Pace Arrow. And, yes I know all about the brake problems thanks.
โSep-10-2016 05:55 PM
โSep-10-2016 12:29 PM
MotorPro wrote:usersmanual wrote:first of all 426 valves are 90 degrees apart. Second the new "HEMI" is not ever close to true hemi. Chrysler stole the design over 60 years ago and then copyrighted the word and now it is catch phrase and not a true design.randallb wrote:
The new Hemi is not a true hemi but kind of a combination of a trick flow design and a BBC head. A true hemi has the valve stems 90 degrees to each other and a direct line from intake to exhaust port. The new hemi is more of a splayed valve. Since Dodge is the truck line almost all of their heavy trucks rely on the Cummins 6.7. Now that would make a nice RV chassis but no one wants a FRED. FREDs are inherently noisy.
Randy
BS The 426 hemi valves were 180 degrees to each other and so are the new 5.7 and 6.4 engines