โJan-29-2015 07:10 PM
โFeb-03-2015 01:53 AM
rjstractor wrote:
It should be noted that the two engines were not rated at the same horsepower, IIRC the 6.2 has 420 and the Eco has 380. It seems as though they were pretty evenly matched although the 6.2 with the 8 speed seemed to be constantly shifting. That would make me crazy.
โFeb-02-2015 06:44 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:mayo30 wrote:
Question.Isn't there a lot more stress and and wear on a 6 cylinder motor putting out the same power as an 8 cylinder motor?I know my 6 cylinder cummins were a lot beefier then the 8 cylinder diesels but that was years ago.
A very long answer short; yes.
When you put a big 8 cylinders worth of air through a 6 cylinder engine the rings are going to load harder against the cylinders and the cylinder pressures are going to go sky high. (comparative speaking)
The reason the Cummins parts were bigger is because they had to be. They are putting the same amount of power through 6 pistons as other manufactures are putting through 8. So things like rods and wrist pins and things like that have to be built bigger and stronger to hold the power put through them. Think how big and strong the rod would have to be if you put 350 HP and 800 ft/lbs through a 1 cylinder Cummins!! :E
Ford performed a tear down from a abused engine in front of a live audience and actually measured some of the parts that illustrated that were still in factory specifications. Again I would have no concern of the engines internals holding up to boosted cylinder pressures.
Link
You may think a 13% leak down is acceptable; I don't and don't know of any engine builder alive that thinks that's Ok.
LOL at Fords "factory specifications."
I still remember GM's "factory specifications" for BBC oil use. 1 qt for 600 miles was ok with them! :E
13% cylinder leak down must be just like the GM oil use deal and be within "factory specifications"! LOL :R
โFeb-02-2015 06:25 PM
FishOnOne wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:mayo30 wrote:
Question.Isn't there a lot more stress and and wear on a 6 cylinder motor putting out the same power as an 8 cylinder motor?I know my 6 cylinder cummins were a lot beefier then the 8 cylinder diesels but that was years ago.
A very long answer short; yes.
When you put a big 8 cylinders worth of air through a 6 cylinder engine the rings are going to load harder against the cylinders and the cylinder pressures are going to go sky high. (comparative speaking)
The reason the Cummins parts were bigger is because they had to be. They are putting the same amount of power through 6 pistons as other manufactures are putting through 8. So things like rods and wrist pins and things like that have to be built bigger and stronger to hold the power put through them. Think how big and strong the rod would have to be if you put 350 HP and 800 ft/lbs through a 1 cylinder Cummins!! :E
Ford performed a tear down from a abused engine in front of a live audience and actually measured some of the parts that illustrated that were still in factory specifications. Again I would have no concern of the engines internals holding up to boosted cylinder pressures.
Link
โFeb-02-2015 06:08 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:mayo30 wrote:
Question.Isn't there a lot more stress and and wear on a 6 cylinder motor putting out the same power as an 8 cylinder motor?I know my 6 cylinder cummins were a lot beefier then the 8 cylinder diesels but that was years ago.
A very long answer short; yes.
When you put a big 8 cylinders worth of air through a 6 cylinder engine the rings are going to load harder against the cylinders and the cylinder pressures are going to go sky high. (comparative speaking)
The reason the Cummins parts were bigger is because they had to be. They are putting the same amount of power through 6 pistons as other manufactures are putting through 8. So things like rods and wrist pins and things like that have to be built bigger and stronger to hold the power put through them. Think how big and strong the rod would have to be if you put 350 HP and 800 ft/lbs through a 1 cylinder Cummins!! :E
โFeb-02-2015 05:32 PM
mayo30 wrote:
Question.Isn't there a lot more stress and and wear on a 6 cylinder motor putting out the same power as an 8 cylinder motor?I know my 6 cylinder cummins were a lot beefier then the 8 cylinder diesels but that was years ago.
โFeb-02-2015 03:45 PM
We'retheRussos wrote:Home Skillet wrote:
You use premium fuel for max horsepower.
With the lower octane fuel, the power is reduced.
Incorrect. The Octane level determines the amount of pressure the fuel can withstand before it detonates. Higher performance / turbo charged engines like the EcoBoost have high compression ratios and therefore require a high octane fuel to prevent knocking. Using a low octane fuel can cause knocking and possibly damage to the engine.
On engines that require 87, they have lower compression ratios and therefore its not beneficial to put in a higher Octane. People read "Premium" and go for the marketing when it does absolutely nothing - if anything there are tests that show your MPG will go down slightly by using a higher octane fuel than recommended because your engine is not able to ignite the fuel at the opportune time.
โFeb-02-2015 03:39 PM
โFeb-02-2015 03:10 PM
Home Skillet wrote:
You use premium fuel for max horsepower.
With the lower octane fuel, the power is reduced.
โFeb-02-2015 02:37 PM
mayo30 wrote:
Question.Isn't there a lot more stress and and wear on a 6 cylinder motor putting out the same power as an 8 cylinder motor?I know my 6 cylinder cummins were a lot beefier then the 8 cylinder diesels but that was years ago.
โFeb-02-2015 02:36 PM
N-Trouble wrote:ib516 wrote:
You know what I couldn't help but notice was that both the EcoBoost in the Lincoln and the 6.2L V8 in the huge Yukon XL were both rated at 16 mpg combined. What happened to the "Eco" part?
"Eco" is just Ford marketing smoke and mirrors.
โFeb-02-2015 02:22 PM
โFeb-02-2015 02:13 PM
โFeb-02-2015 01:43 PM
โFeb-02-2015 01:15 PM
goducks10 wrote:ksss wrote:
The "Eco" portion of the Ecoboost has been the topic of many a conversation. I had read somewhere, that Ford originally had a different name for the motor which I can't remember what it was at the moment but it made sense. The marketing department changed the name to Ecoboost even though it really isn't eco anything. Four hundred plus pounds of torque in a gas motor is not going to come without burning a fair amount of gas.
Originally it was to be called the EgoBoost :W
โFeb-02-2015 01:13 PM