โJun-21-2004 09:12 PM
We are getting closer to answers I am looking for etc.
โJun-28-2012 07:11 PM
transamz9 wrote:Taco wrote:
I just bought a new gas truck. Here is why.
I cannot afford to always own a vehicle that is in warranty. can't buy a new 40k vehicle every 4-5 years. I read the horror stories here and other places about the repair bills on the diesels. some up in the 10k plus range. when they do break they plain cost lots more to fix outside of warranty.
The other reason is that it costs 8k or so more to start. then factor in the finance costs on the 8k so add maybe another 1000. Then add about 500 worth of DEF over 125k miles. then factor slightly increased maint costs, and the 40 cents of so premium of diesel fuel. also for me I pay personal property tax on the vehicle so I pay property tax on that 8k premium
I keep them for 10-12 years and will put maybe 125-150k on it. neither gas nor diesel will be likely to wear out in that period. the diesel would get about 3 mpg better over that period and will have decreased fuel cost but would be offset by the all the additional expenses outlined earlier.
In towing power differences read the pickuptrucks.com shootouts to see a full throttle measured comparison. the gas engines towing in the 10-12k trailer range are plenty powerful enough to maintain reasonable speed on any interstate grade. You just have to be willing to press the pedal. yes the engine will make some noise while you do this but it isn't hurting anything.
Does a diesel make sense towing over 12k absolutely. under 12k i don't think it makes sense. But this is America, if you want a diesel get it if you can afford it, it will tow any weight better but I don't see a need for it under 12k given it's financial disadvantages.
You also have to remember that that diesel truck is also going to be worth 8-10,000 more when you go to sell it in 10-12 years.;)
โJun-28-2012 07:02 PM
โJun-28-2012 06:44 PM
โJun-28-2012 02:57 PM
โJun-26-2012 11:29 AM
Hannibal wrote:dfranks wrote:Hannibal wrote:
Absolutely! The Hemi runs 4200rpm 60mph in 2nd gear multiplying torque X 1.67 up the grades. The Cummins with all it's torque is rpm limited to 3k~rpm. That's too bad.
Is that, 60 mph towing? Or empty. Honestly, my 05 Hemi wouldnt get to 4200rpm towing my 9k trailer(in 2nd) up a 6-8% grade. It just didn't have the torque. God help me if I had to slow down for a corner pulling a grade like that.
You know what I'm talking about.
Heading east out of Revelstoke, just before Rogers pass for example.
That one will show you the pucker factor going up or down...
Of course it's 60mph towing. I'm not aware of any 8% grades on interstate highways around the southeast. On state roads where the grades can be higher, yes it slowed us down to a crawl. With both the Cummins and the Hemi. The Hemi still towed faster with 100 more horsepower.
โJun-26-2012 10:12 AM
Hannibal wrote:Paul Clancy wrote:
Where I live gas trucks plummet on resale price, diesels don't. If you're reselling gas is a bad choice here. If you're buying used maybe not.
Sounds like an even more compelling reason to buy a gas powered pickup. Got any examples of duplicate trucks with gas and diesel for sale? Plummet is a pretty extreme description.
โJun-26-2012 03:57 AM
Paul Clancy wrote:
Where I live gas trucks plummet on resale price, diesels don't. If you're reselling gas is a bad choice here. If you're buying used maybe not.
โJun-26-2012 03:55 AM
dfranks wrote:Hannibal wrote:
Absolutely! The Hemi runs 4200rpm 60mph in 2nd gear multiplying torque X 1.67 up the grades. The Cummins with all it's torque is rpm limited to 3k~rpm. That's too bad.
Is that, 60 mph towing? Or empty. Honestly, my 05 Hemi wouldnt get to 4200rpm towing my 9k trailer(in 2nd) up a 6-8% grade. It just didn't have the torque. God help me if I had to slow down for a corner pulling a grade like that.
You know what I'm talking about.
Heading east out of Revelstoke, just before Rogers pass for example.
That one will show you the pucker factor going up or down...
โJun-26-2012 02:23 AM
โJun-25-2012 07:25 PM
Taco wrote:
I just bought a new gas truck. Here is why.
I cannot afford to always own a vehicle that is in warranty. can't buy a new 40k vehicle every 4-5 years. I read the horror stories here and other places about the repair bills on the diesels. some up in the 10k plus range. when they do break they plain cost lots more to fix outside of warranty.
The other reason is that it costs 8k or so more to start. then factor in the finance costs on the 8k so add maybe another 1000. Then add about 500 worth of DEF over 125k miles. then factor slightly increased maint costs, and the 40 cents of so premium of diesel fuel. also for me I pay personal property tax on the vehicle so I pay property tax on that 8k premium
I keep them for 10-12 years and will put maybe 125-150k on it. neither gas nor diesel will be likely to wear out in that period. the diesel would get about 3 mpg better over that period and will have decreased fuel cost but would be offset by the all the additional expenses outlined earlier.
In towing power differences read the pickuptrucks.com shootouts to see a full throttle measured comparison. the gas engines towing in the 10-12k trailer range are plenty powerful enough to maintain reasonable speed on any interstate grade. You just have to be willing to press the pedal. yes the engine will make some noise while you do this but it isn't hurting anything.
Does a diesel make sense towing over 12k absolutely. under 12k i don't think it makes sense. But this is America, if you want a diesel get it if you can afford it, it will tow any weight better but I don't see a need for it under 12k given it's financial disadvantages.
โJun-25-2012 06:58 PM
Hannibal wrote:
Absolutely! The Hemi runs 4200rpm 60mph in 2nd gear multiplying torque X 1.67 up the grades. The Cummins with all it's torque is rpm limited to 3k~rpm. That's too bad.
โJun-25-2012 06:47 PM
โJun-24-2012 08:36 AM
โJun-24-2012 06:05 AM
โJun-23-2012 05:00 AM