โAug-15-2014 06:12 AM
โAug-20-2014 05:40 PM
2005 Chevy Silverado 3500 dually CC/LB Duramax/Allison
2008 Jayco Designer 35RLTS fifth wheel
Onan 5500W Marquis Gold gas generator (HGJAB - 1038D)
โAug-20-2014 05:13 PM
joshuajim wrote:
My opinion of DRW trucks is similar ti twin engine aircraft. When one engine fails, the second one is only there to carry you to the scene of the crash.
On a DRW, if you get a nail in one dual and it goes flat, you probably will not notice it until it shreds, but by that time the other tire is ruined by carrying twice the design load and is trash also. Buy 2 tires instead of one.
โAug-20-2014 07:23 AM
โAug-19-2014 06:38 PM
โAug-19-2014 06:00 PM
โAug-19-2014 05:37 PM
brholt wrote:AH64ID wrote:
All diesel's have hydro, there is no vacuum on a diesel.
Thanks for the link, I couldn't find that information when I searched earlier.
Pretty sure the F250 Diesel uses Vacuum boost. As I understand it the " 6.7's have a really nice wet vacuum pump mounted on the front cover driven off the opposite side of the gear for the HP fuel pump. They use the vacuum for waste gate control and EGR cooler bypass control. ".
You need to step up to the F350 to get hydro-boost in a diesel, DRW in a gas
โAug-19-2014 05:13 PM
AH64ID wrote:
All diesel's have hydro, there is no vacuum on a diesel.
Thanks for the link, I couldn't find that information when I searched earlier.
โAug-19-2014 03:06 PM
โAug-19-2014 03:03 PM
AH64ID wrote:brholt wrote:
All other things being equal this is probably accurate. However, in late model trucks, at least Ford, you also get different components such as better brakes and a stronger rear axle.
Ford advertises the same brakes on all pickups, F-250 thru F-450.
โAug-16-2014 03:46 PM
brholt wrote:
All other things being equal this is probably accurate. However, in late model trucks, at least Ford, you also get different components such as better brakes and a stronger rear axle.
โAug-16-2014 03:37 PM
AH64ID wrote:
SRW vs DRW is always a debate. Yes there is more stability when comparing apples to apples. 4 LRE tires are more stable than 2, and it's not just the width (really little with the width IMHO) it's the stifness. If the outers where the same width as the SRW and you could keep the springs in the same spot the DRW would still be more stable.
Both the SRW and DRW pivot the suspension at the same point, so any sway reduction or stability improvement on a DRW is from a lack of tire deflection.
Super single, for a pickup they are the 19.5" conversions. While it's probably not quite as stable as a DRW I am willing to bet that for most loads it is. LRG sidewalls are much stiffer than LRE, and designed differently.. but somehow they really don't ride any worse on a 1 ton.
So 2 tires at 110psi to carry 9,000lbs or 4 tires at 65 psi to carry 9,350 lbs (limits on SRW (245/70R19.5) and DRW applications for same truck, i.e. 03-12 Dodge). Probably about the same.
Stock for stock a DRW will walk all over a SRW, but if a DRW isn't an option it's not difficult to make a SRW compete in all aspects with a DRW.. and it still is easy to drive on tight back roads.
โAug-16-2014 06:06 AM
โAug-16-2014 05:25 AM
RoyJ wrote:N-Trouble wrote:
Apples and oranges... Duallies are recommended due to their extra width and stability they provide. Going to a super single on a big rig does not change the width and from what I have seen these super singles are primarily being run on the trailers and not the tractor.
Nit picking here, but super singles ARE narrower than a standard set of 11R22.5/24.5s.
Their primary goal is fuel savings, there're both lighter than lower in rolling resistance. However, there're also drawbacks, including cost and spare availability, and many carriers are switching back.
โAug-15-2014 10:36 PM