Feb-01-2014 12:40 PM
Mar-17-2014 08:54 PM
Mar-17-2014 12:18 PM
Mar-17-2014 11:48 AM
Less Stuff wrote:
Interesting news from Paris.
Love of diesel fueled vehicles may end
Mar-17-2014 11:46 AM
Mar-17-2014 11:36 AM
Mar-15-2014 03:58 PM
Redsky wrote:
I can't believe that someone would post that the fuel consumption goes up with a load only for gas engines. My diesel pickup on the open road gets 18 mpg but with a camper in the bed it gets more like 13 MPG and in the mountains it is 11 MPG and with a head wind it can be as low as 9.5 MPG.
A very big cost to owning a diesel that is seldom mentioned is the difficulty in getting problems diagnosed and repairs done in a timely manner. It took multiple trips to 3 different dealers to get a faulty NOx sensor diagnosed and replaced. Had it happened out of warranty the cost would have been over $700 for this simple repair.
I know that if I had a problem with the truck while out camping the trip would be over as the odds are between very slim and none that I could find a Chevy diesel mechanic out in the rural west. I would need to limp into the biggest town I could find and then check in at a hotel within walking distance and spend a few days trying to get the truck fixed.
I have had breakdowns with my gas engine pickups while traveling over the years but getting the problem diagnosed and the repair done never cost me more than a day. The gas engine mechanic was easy to find and the parts for the engine were always available locally. Good luck trying to get that with any diesel engine in a pickup truck.
It is even more difficult with all the different model years. GM/Chevy for example has different diesel engines in its pre-2004, 2004-2006.5, 2006-2007, 2008-2010,2011-2014 model trucks. No local NAPA store is going to stock parts for a diesel engine. You may be able to find a belt or hose but that will be it.
If you plan to tow more than 12,000 lbs. then a diesel engine is the best choice and you deal with the higher purchase price, higher fuel cost, higher maintenance costs, higher repair costs, and greater difficulty in getting problems diagnosed and repaired. But this is a truck camper forum and no one needs a diesel to haul around a 5,000 lb. camper load unless they are also towing a 8,000 lb. trailer with its load.
There is an emotional appeal to having a big bad diesel truck that will out accelerate and out pull anyone's gas engine equipped truck and I have no problem with their boyish enthusiasm. I do have a problem when they try to rationalize their decision to buy a diesel. I have multiple friends who bought tractors for their 5-acre "ranches" and they can give me many reasons for why they needed a tractor and I try to listen with a straight face, which is not easy to do.
Mar-15-2014 03:02 PM
Bigfootchevy wrote:Why do everyone care so much about the price of fuel, the cost of the pickup , Ins, tags, many other things makes fuel not worth talking about anymore. Just spend what one can and enjoy them self. Just make more money.
I believe a diesel engine is the best for hauling a truck camper.
With the price of diesel going up more each week is it still worth it?
Just looking for opinions.
Today in Canada a gallon of diesel is worth about 75 cents more than gas!
With the extra cost of the diesel engine and extra cost at the pump, I am starting to rethink my decision to order my new truck with a diesel!
I cannot see me not ordering a diesel, but I just got back from vacation and drove pass the gas station and saw the new diesel price of $1.39 per litre cost, was a bit of a shock. Gas was $1.20 per litre. I believe their are 3.7 litres in a gallon.
Thanks
Paul
Mar-15-2014 02:05 PM
Mar-15-2014 11:04 AM
Mar-14-2014 10:07 AM
Reddog1 wrote:
deltabravo, check your Private Messages
Wayne
Moderator
Mar-14-2014 08:45 AM
Mar-14-2014 08:38 AM
Mar-14-2014 08:16 AM
TomG2 wrote:deltabravo wrote:TomG2 wrote:
I am curious as to why the diesel proponents feel compelled to preach the benefits of their Super Max, Super Duty, or Ram diesel fueled pickups.
We are preaching it because people are asking for our opinion.
Never heard of a Super Max truck though.
DuraMax, Super Duty, Ram, whatever, the names sound more like a male enhancement ad than simple fuel differences. Most of us know how to choose a vehicle, without being preached to.
Mar-14-2014 07:51 AM
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke