โJun-21-2004 09:12 PM
We are getting closer to answers I am looking for etc.
โSep-24-2005 03:17 AM
LASTLS1 wrote:
Options to consider. Deisel is .10 more a gallon. My new F350 6.0 Powerstroke gets between 8-11mpg. That is empty no towing. I really think I could get the same milage with a gas engine. After having a 7.3 powerstroke for 5 yrs I'm REALLY disapointed with this new engine. Also for some reason it smells BAD!!! As far as Chevy or Dodge I don't know. I would recommend the older 7.3 power stroke. Better mileage and better for pulling heavy loads. Hope this helps, Andy.
โSep-20-2005 12:50 PM
โSep-16-2005 04:13 PM
โSep-16-2005 05:20 AM
BertP wrote:
hindle_az -
And, no, a diesel will not always hold OD. I came out of Kelowna BC a couple of weeks ago in my 3500 dually D/A and a 10,000 - 11,000 lb 5er on back. Going up a 6 - 8% grade, the best I could do was around 52 mph in 3rd gear. As soon as I crested the grade, the tranny grabbed 4th, but it wouldn't coming up the hill.
Bert
โSep-13-2005 10:23 AM
BertP wrote:
hindle_az - Your reference to a gasser of the same displacement "without forced induction" struck me as a little misleading. I simply wanted to point out that a gasser will produce far more power per unit of displacement than a diesel without a turbo. And, there are still quite a few gassers in cars that are turbo'd from the factory. If they turbo'd the truck gassers in the factory, the cost would be a lot less than you think. If I add a turbo to a gasser on my own, the cost will be very high but not if it is done at the factory.
As for the tranny shifting, that is a tranny problem, not an engine problem. If the truck couldn't hold the hill in OD, then the tranny should not shift intoo OD. Whether there is a gasser or diesel behind that tranny is irrelavent.
And, no, a diesel will not always hold OD. I came out of Kelowna BC a couple of weeks ago in my 3500 dually D/A and a 10,000 - 11,000 lb 5er on back. Going up a 6 - 8% grade, the best I could do was around 52 mph in 3rd gear. As soon as I crested the grade, the tranny grabbed 4th, but it wouldn't coming up the hill.
Lynn Rupper - Your engine has less power than mine, yet you are able to climb a 6% hill in direct with a heavier trailer than I have? It is possible if the tranny ratios allow it, but mine wouldn't. When my tranny grabbed 4th, the rpm dropped from 3000 to 2400. I don't have the power curve for the LLY in front of me, but I think it develops a max of around 250 HP at that rpm. It would appear that that hill demanded more than 250 HP, so my tranny couldn't upshift.
Bert
โSep-13-2005 10:10 AM
kennard04 wrote:hindle_az wrote:
BertP, I said struggling because after it downshifted got back up to speed and went back into overdrive a couple of miles later it would downshift and then repeat this pattern over and over. It was struggling!!!
Bottom line is the truck couldn't maintain the speed in overdrive. A diesel would have. Period.
a diesel will pull any grade in OD ? Come on man, any blanket statement surely will have plenty of holes in it. Gassers rev, diesels don't rev as much but if you'll look at the rpm range of the new Ford 6.0, it's MUCH higher revvin than the 7.3 and the DMax/Cummins. HP is made by multiplying torque times rpm. You can have all the torque in the world and go slowly up a hill. But you'll need rpm to stay at speed, rpm and hp.
โSep-12-2005 08:48 PM
โSep-12-2005 06:19 PM
โSep-12-2005 03:05 PM
โSep-12-2005 01:49 PM
โSep-12-2005 01:42 PM
โSep-11-2005 05:00 PM
โSep-09-2005 01:30 PM
hindle_az wrote:
LOL...sure the same gear ratios will put out the same RPM but there is NO WAY a gasser of the same displacement (without forced induction) is going to pull anything of substantial size in comparison with the Diesel counterpart unless it's running lower gears.
hindle_az wrote:
I have a GMC2500HD duramx and rode with a guy that pulls a simliar size trailer as mine also running a GMC but a gasser. His truck was constantly shifting and struggling to maintain 70MPH on somewhat on flat grades with a small head wind. My truck in the same situation would be in overdrive with cruise control and getting 5 to 6 more MPG. Can you imagine what would happen if it was running the same gear ratio of my diesel? The Diesel's can pull the taller gear ratio because they have the torque that simply isn't there with a gasser hence the better mileage, less shifts, etc...
hindle_az wrote:
Obviously everything has pro's and con's but if you do any decent amount of towing with a large trailer Diesel wins on paper everytime.
If you can't deal with the smoke, dirty pumps, noise then get the gasser.
โSep-09-2005 11:20 AM
โSep-09-2005 11:20 AM
BertP wrote:
tjcocker - It sounds like you have a nice truck now. But, how much of the difference you feel towing with the new truck vs the old one is because it has a diesel engine and how much is because it is an F250 vs an F150? The F250 is a much more substantial vehicle than the F150 - that's not knocking the F150, just recognizing that the F250 is bigger and heavier than the F150 in almost every respect. Even if the two trucks had exactly the same engine and tranny, you would notice a big difference.
kenoncooch - What you say is true, but I spend a lot of time in the right lane on grades as well and I have a diesel. I know that there are many people who would have you believe that my 3500 CC Dually D/A will pull a 15,000 lb trailer up a 45* grade in OD at 75 mph. The truth is it won't. I have spent a fair amount of time in 4th and even 3rd going up long steep grades pulling my 10,000+ lb 5er. Also, the gassers rev at exactly the same rpm as the diesels at highway speed if they have a tranny with the same (or close) OD ratio behind them. The 1500HD I had with a 6.0l gasser revved at the same rpm as my DMax on the highway. Yes, a gasser will downshift earlier than a diesel, but that doesn't mean that a diesel won't downshift.
Bert