โJun-21-2004 09:12 PM
We are getting closer to answers I am looking for etc.
โSep-02-2007 09:35 PM
โAug-31-2007 06:37 PM
โAug-31-2007 05:43 PM
No thanks. I'm not buying a 200,000 mile rig. I don't care what kind of condition the power plant is in. I bought my last F-150 with 150,000 miles and put another 83,000 miles on it, but I knew the condition and it was a steal of a deal for price. When was the last time you bought a pickup with 200,000 miles?
โAug-31-2007 04:15 AM
Steak2k1 wrote:
Diesel VS Gas.
Hmm let me see. Passin a gasser loaded with a 5'er going up a 7% grade. He's doin 40 in 2nd gear & I,m doing 70+ in 6th....priceless.!!
Steak2k1 wrote:
Hmm let me see. Gassers cost more to fill up especialy seeing as one cannot make gasoline nor ethanol at home-you all is at the mercy fo the OIL company...ever hear of BioDiesel..?? I make my fuel.
Steak2k1 wrote:
Hmm let me see. Diesel GM after 200k still sells very very well Gasser GM not so good...likely worn out by that time..!! same would apply to Ferd/Dodge.
Steak2k1 wrote:
No contest folks...be it torque, longetivity or the ability to make your own fuel diesel wins out.
rgds,
stk
โAug-31-2007 03:14 AM
Sport45 wrote:
A few more good natured counter pounts:Steak2k1 wrote:
Diesel VS Gas.
Hmm let me see. Passin a gasser loaded with a 5'er going up a 7% grade. He's doin 40 in 2nd gear & I,m doing 70+ in 6th....priceless.!!
I'm happy for you. I grew up and quit racing a long time ago. We'll both make it to the top and that's good enough for me. By the way, did the driver of the gas rig know you guys were racing? How do you know what gear he was in?
Priceless? I though you shelled out good money for that beefy, testosterone-dripping, manly engine.
Hmm let me see. Gassers cost more to fill up especialy seeing as one cannot make gasoline nor ethanol at home-you all is at the mercy fo the OIL company...ever hear of BioDiesel..?? I make my fuel.
You make all of your fuel? Must have a lot of time on your hands and a bit of a processing plant in your barn.
Who says you can't make corn-squeezin's at home? That's been going on ever since prohibition. Ever heard of pipeline drip condensate? Burns about as good as gas. Used to run on a bit (dieseling was a bad thing then) with carburated engines, but not too bad in these fuel injected rigs. Gasoline engines also easily adapt to natural gas, butane, propane, or hydrogen. I've seen a lot of big trucks (like garbage trucks) that run fixed routes burning propane.
Hmm let me see. Diesel GM after 200k still sells very very well
Gasser GM not so good...likely worn out by that time..!! same would apply to Ferd/Dodge.
No thanks. I'm not buying a 200,000 mile rig. I don't care what kind of condition the power plant is in. I bought my last F-150 with 150,000 miles and put another 83,000 miles on it, but I knew the condition and it was a steal of a deal for price. When was the last time you bought a pickup with 200,000 miles? Or are you a seller at that point? I see you drive an '06 with "a little 'xtra jam." If you don't mind my asking, how many miles did you have on your trade-in?
No contest folks...be it torque, longetivity or the ability to make your own fuel diesel wins out.
Okay, you win. The rest of us are just plain stupid. I'll go grab my pointy hat and sit in the corner now.
I hope you're proud of yourself. I'll probably not be able to sleep for weeks knowing how bad I screwed up.:(
rgds,
stk
โAug-31-2007 03:09 AM
โAug-30-2007 11:57 PM
โAug-30-2007 11:22 PM
'06 GMC DMax CCSB 594,545 km
(368,890 miles)
2003 Citation 26RKS
.โAug-30-2007 09:33 AM
Sport45 wrote:Good natured counter points:
And some good natured counter-counter pointsHigher initial cost is recovered in about 60k on fuel savings, and at resale you will come out ahead.
Are you quite sure about that? Or did you maybe fudge the diesel mpg up and the gasoline mpg down? Do you come out ahead at resale if you buy another diesel? It seems to me that you only recoup that upfront cost if you don't buy a replacement vehicle. Or can you claim that credit if you replace the diesel with a gasser?
Well, I get 15-16 regularly with a 5,500lb camper on my truck. I believe you would be lucky to get 9-10 with a gas truck. 5 mpg difference at 60,000 miles makes about a 2,000 gallon difference. Forgetting that Diesel is less per gallon (usually) and figuring both at 3 bucks a gallon (low) that makes a $6,000 difference in price (less then cost of the diesel option)As far as resale value there is a huge difference between a diesel and gas motor, especially when both trucks are high mileage. 5-7k for a 6-7 year old Dodge with 100,000 miles looking at autotrader.More oil changes? Dodge recommends every 15,000 miles, for severe use 7,500. I spend 50 bucks every 7,500 miles. Not bad in my book.
I change my oil, all six quarts of it, and filter for about $15 every 5000 miles. Even better in my (check)book. And I only change fuel and air filters, for another $20, once a year.
Good point. The difference in oil costs saves you about $300 in 100,000 miles.No glow plugs, never had to replace an injector on my two diesels. My 94 had a starter solenoid go bad at 140k, but other than that just fluids, tires and brakes. New truck has incurred no extra costs in 30k.
I'm glad to hear your diesel has lasted 30,000 miles. Were you worried? My '92 F-150 302, as mentioned above went 233,000 miles with only 2 seals replaced. (And many, many oil changes....) Some last, some don't. But nobody can argue that the diesel is cheaper to fix if it doesn't.
By nature diesels are simpler engines than gas motors as they don't have an ignition system. Many Diesels go over 500k with no concernable engine service. This is why over the road trucks are primarily diesel.233k is excellent mileage for a gas motor, but nothing to brag about with a good diesel. Our company changed fleet vehicles from gas Fords to Diesel Fords and Chevy's about 7 years ago. The diesels have required far less service, and far less fuel bills. We have about 25 trucks. Granted a new gas truck very well could perform better then the ones we let go.Newer diesels (at least our Dodge) start easily in cold temps. Started ours at 10 below w/o waiting for the heater grid light to go off.
I'm willing to call that a wash. My gas engine isn't ever hard to start in cold weather either. What's a heater grid? I just jump in and turn the key.
A heater grid helps warm the air prior to being inducted into the motor. Being able to start at -10 w/o using it shows just how far modern diesels have come to address cold starts. Dodge cold startThis is an older Dodge and the newer ones start better. Point being no difference between gas and diesel for a cold start.Fuel gelling is easily fixed with additive when in extreme cold temps.
Can't comment here. Never added anything to my fuel or coolant to keep the engine working.
Me neither. It has never been cold enough. The colder areas have a different blend of diesel fuel which should take care of temperature. I personally would probably add an anti gel when it gets below -10 degrees.Yes, the engines are heavier. This is to be expected in an engine designed for 2-5 times longer life span and making more TQ.
Is it heavier for a longer life span? Or is it heavier because the peak cylinder pressure is higher? Where on earth did the 5 times longer come from, anyway? Maybe we're fudging diesels up and gassers down again? Even if they lasted twice as long you could buy a whole new engine to replace the worn out gasser for the extra cost. And you wouldn't have to pay for it up front. That cost would be deferred at least 200,000 miles.
5 times is an extreme, but there are lots of diesels out there with over 500,000 miles on them and even some close to a million miles. Our gasser company trucks were retired at 100k due to high maintenance costs, our diesels are running well at over 200k when we sell them for appearance sake. (Construction trucks get used hard) My 94 had over 200k and drove like new when we sold it to get a dually.To each their own. I have owned many gas vehicles and two diesel ones. Who knows, maybe one day I will drive a gasser again.
And some day I might have a diesel. I don't have anything against diesels and if it makes sense next time I'm in the market I'll buy one.
Like you I have nothing against a gas truck. It seems to me though looking for a new truck the diesel option not only pays for itself in the first 60k and actually costs less overall considering resale value, why not have the more powerful, more efficient, longer range and more reliable (based on my experience with our fleet trucks)rig?Beauty is in the eye of the key holder.
Absolutely!!!
This post isn't meant to be a slam against you personally or diesels in general. I've always said that diesels have their place. And sometimes that place is under the hood of a privately owned pickup. They make perfect cents (sic) for the over the road truckers, because they are all about life cycle cost and making money. Very few of us, me included, put 75,000+ miles a year on a vehicle and accumulate fuel bills that dwarf the monthly truck payment. For them a couple mpg is HUGE. For me, it's really not that big of a deal. I had enough money for a diesel so I have money for gasoline. We, for the most part don't care if the vehicle will last 1,000,000 miles because we're not keeping them nearly that long anyway. We'll get tired of it and want something new, or we'll see the next year model has a 5-valve tri-turbo 1000 lb-ft engine that runs on bacon grease and we have to have it. Even here on RV.net when you look at the signatures you rarely see a tow vehicle that's more than five years old.
Your points are well taken and no one truck is right for everyone. There is no disrespect for anybody's truck or preference. Thanks for the interesting and thoughtful responses. It is a pleasure to debate with such a civil and courteous poster.
Cheers,
Greg
Happy travels!
โAug-30-2007 03:58 AM
Good natured counter points:
Higher initial cost is recovered in about 60k on fuel savings, and at resale you will come out ahead.
More oil changes? Dodge recommends every 15,000 miles, for severe use 7,500. I spend 50 bucks every 7,500 miles. Not bad in my book.
No glow plugs, never had to replace an injector on my two diesels. My 94 had a starter solenoid go bad at 140k, but other than that just fluids, tires and brakes. New truck has incured no extra costs in 30k.
Newer diesels (at least our Dodge) start easily in cold temps. Started ours at 10 below w/o waiting for the heater grid light to go off.
Fuel gelling is easily fixed with addative when in extreme cold temps.
Yes, the engines are heavier. This is to be expected in an engine designed for 2-5 times longer life span and making more TQ.
To each their own. I have owned many gas vehicles and two diesel ones. Who knows, maybe one day I will drive a gasser again.
Beauty is in the eye of the key holder.
โAug-29-2007 07:44 AM
tomdrobin wrote:
Diesel Pros:
Lots of low end torque for towing.
Inherently better fuel economy than gasoline engine.
Diesel Cons:
Higher initial investment.
Higher maintenance cost: More oil changes, more oil, more expensive filters. Battery replacement costs a lot more. Injectors and glow plugs don't need regular replacement, but when they do a lot more $$$ than a set of spark plugs.
Don't start as well in really cold temps.
Fuel jelling sometimes in winter.
Extra weight of engine adds to vehicle weight.
โAug-26-2007 09:18 PM
โAug-25-2007 04:22 PM
Sport45 wrote:Jarlaxle wrote:
Plenty of them. My old F-350 had 366,000 miles & most people guessed it at having about a third of that. My uncle's Dakota looks like someone has turned the odometer forward about 200,000 miles (he has 280K on it)--it's been repainted (5 years ago), but the interior is original except the floor mats.
It's great to see others keeping vehicles on the road a long time, but I think we're the exception rather than the rule.
Happy travels!
โAug-25-2007 08:01 AM
Jarlaxle wrote:
Plenty of them. My old F-350 had 366,000 miles & most people guessed it at having about a third of that. My uncle's Dakota looks like someone has turned the odometer forward about 200,000 miles (he has 280K on it)--it's been repainted (5 years ago), but the interior is original except the floor mats.
โAug-25-2007 06:02 AM