Dec-29-2013 04:21 PM
Dec-30-2013 03:10 PM
Dec-30-2013 02:43 PM
Supercharged wrote:
So it looks like I won.
Dec-30-2013 02:14 PM
Supercharged wrote:
So it looks like I won.
Dec-30-2013 02:00 PM
Dec-30-2013 01:43 PM
Dec-30-2013 01:12 PM
Dec-30-2013 11:12 AM
Dec-30-2013 10:53 AM
Supercharged wrote:Sue Bee wrote:I sold a 1979 Chev 1500 with a 454 last year, I didn't drive it for the last 10 years is why I sold it. It had 440,000 miles, it had a steel crank, 7 qt. oil pan, only did the values ones, nothing else ever. 3 trans, 3 rad., 6 or 7 starters, but nothing to the motor. It pulled a 36 ft. goose neck around picking up old cars in the late 70's and 80's. I don't see that many diesel doing that today. Paid $7200 for it new sold it for $2500. Cost $3700 to own for 33 years, Gas good, diesel less good.
You're both being silly, and not helpful. New diesels smoke way less and stink way less than the good old clatter trucks of years past.
To my way of thinking, if you plan on putting many, many miles on the odometer every year, and/or if you plan on hauling or towing heavy items, and if you want your truck to last more than 150-200K, and you plan on keeping it until it pukes, or reselling it at some point further on down the line (like when it has 200K on it), you will recoup the extra cost of the diesel engine, and the exhast brake will make you happy. If you plan on driving it less than 10K a year, aren't doing much heavy hauling or towing, plan on selling it within 6-8 years, go for the gasser.
Dec-30-2013 10:49 AM
Supercharged wrote:
I sold a 1979 Chev 1500 with a 454 last year, I didn't drive it for the last 10 years is why I sold it. It had 440,000 miles, it had a steel crank, 7 qt. oil pan, only did the values ones, nothing else ever. 3 trans, 3 rad., 6 or 7 starters, but nothing to the motor. It pulled a 36 ft. goose neck around picking up old cars in the late 70's and 80's. I don't see that many diesel doing that today. Paid $7200 for it new sold it for $2500. Cost $3700 to own for 33 years, Gas good, diesel less good.
Dec-30-2013 10:21 AM
Dec-30-2013 10:06 AM
Sue Bee wrote:I sold a 1979 Chev 1500 with a 454 last year, I didn't drive it for the last 10 years is why I sold it. It had 440,000 miles, it had a steel crank, 7 qt. oil pan, only did the values ones, nothing else ever. 3 trans, 3 rad., 6 or 7 starters, but nothing to the motor. It pulled a 36 ft. goose neck around picking up old cars in the late 70's and 80's. I don't see that many diesel doing that today. Paid $7200 for it new sold it for $2500. Cost $3700 to own for 33 years, Gas good, diesel less good.
You're both being silly, and not helpful. New diesels smoke way less and stink way less than the good old clatter trucks of years past.
To my way of thinking, if you plan on putting many, many miles on the odometer every year, and/or if you plan on hauling or towing heavy items, and if you want your truck to last more than 150-200K, and you plan on keeping it until it pukes, or reselling it at some point further on down the line (like when it has 200K on it), you will recoup the extra cost of the diesel engine, and the exhast brake will make you happy. If you plan on driving it less than 10K a year, aren't doing much heavy hauling or towing, plan on selling it within 6-8 years, go for the gasser.
Dec-30-2013 09:53 AM
FreeLanceing wrote:
I drove a big rig, like in 318 detroit for a few years. Hard to start in the winter, expensive to fix. The worst for me was the smell. After a fill up, after a long haul I could smell the fuel for a long time. When I worked consrtuction they asked if I wanted a gas or diesel, took the gas. Pulling a heavy job trailer with welder etc never looked back, took the gas welder as well. The guys who ran the diesels were always in the shop getting repaired truck or welder. We worked on a partial performance bonus so I was glad to keep the gas. I just bought a new JD subcompact utility tractor 27hp diesel. Now I feel real macho, sounds cool, power up the a, but its hard to start in the cold. My HHR sits next to it in the garage it smells like diesel, the house is starting to smell like diesel. The maintence is 200 bucks to change the oil. We all can rationalise anything we want. If I were buying a truck to haul a camper it would be gas all the way. These new gas motors are so powerfull, effient, the transmision are so much better than just a few years ago. You did not mention the cost diff, nor the cost of feeding the beast. My book, if you never drove one, and you want to look cool and feel mocho diesel. If you have nothing to prove and like to keep your cash in your pocket for other use gas. You wont be disapointed with either.
Dec-30-2013 09:37 AM
Dec-30-2013 09:09 AM
mike mck wrote:I used to buy 1000 gal or more diesel a month, spend $25,000 per year on repairs on those diesels. It is the smoke that makes drivers keep coming back, it take time away from them and then one can think clearer again.Supercharged wrote:mike mck wrote:You have 250 post's, your not aload to beat up on me until you get 2000 post's. Every time I go past 17 and the 101 I see your diesel smoke in the air.Supercharged wrote:kohldad wrote:
Already know my new truck will be a 2014 Dodge SRW Crew Cab 4x4 with auto tranny. What I don't know is if I should go with the new 6.4 or diesel. Worked outthe numbers and the cost for my use of 15k miles/year with 50% TC duty, 25% DD, and 25% errands is only a few hundred difference a year.
So it comes down to the other advantage to decide.
Diesel - all the power and torque could need and then some.
Gas
-no cool down time (important due to lots of stops for sightseeing)
-less weight on the same axles/brakes equals better braking (best I can find, the 6.4 will use the same axles as the diesel)
-less to worry about (no DEF, turbo, etc)
My previous truck was a 92 F350 w/460 auto which I used to pull a 7,000# TT including a trip to Yellowstone and Arches. Never had an issue with power on that truck. So am familiar and comfortable with reving the engine for the power.
Which would you choose and why?
You must remember if you get a gas engine they will look funny at you when you pull in at night in a new camp ground, there will be no lawn chair set out for you. Then on the good side of it, your pickup will not smoke, shake, smell, make all that noise, your fuel will cost 70 cents per gal less than diesel, and not tract on your carpet, diesel repairs are double, and the guy down the street will tell all the neighors you don't understand the power you lost.
Not sure where you are buying your fuel but in North Phoenix I'm at $3.59/gal for diesel while 89 0ctane gas is 3.09 so 50 cents. As you are supercharged figure $3.35/gal so difference is 24 cents. Not to long ago Diesel was the same as gas.
Whether diesel or gas makes since depends on your needs. With the weight of my 11.5 ft Caribou camper and M105A3 trailer Diesel just made sense. I have not found repairs are twice as much but have found they occur half as often. 1999 F550 7.3 powerstroke.
I also own a 94 supercharged F150 lightning.
F550 diesel get the heavy lifting done.
F150 gasser runs the 11 sec 1/4 mile.
Right tool for the right job.
Area is close but seeing my diesel smoke? Nope not mine. Just does not smoke.
Not beating up on you just pointing out a couple flaws in your post.:p
Dec-30-2013 08:33 AM
Supercharged wrote:mike mck wrote:You have 250 post's, your not aload to beat up on me until you get 2000 post's. Every time I go past 17 and the 101 I see your diesel smoke in the air.Supercharged wrote:kohldad wrote:
Already know my new truck will be a 2014 Dodge SRW Crew Cab 4x4 with auto tranny. What I don't know is if I should go with the new 6.4 or diesel. Worked outthe numbers and the cost for my use of 15k miles/year with 50% TC duty, 25% DD, and 25% errands is only a few hundred difference a year.
So it comes down to the other advantage to decide.
Diesel - all the power and torque could need and then some.
Gas
-no cool down time (important due to lots of stops for sightseeing)
-less weight on the same axles/brakes equals better braking (best I can find, the 6.4 will use the same axles as the diesel)
-less to worry about (no DEF, turbo, etc)
My previous truck was a 92 F350 w/460 auto which I used to pull a 7,000# TT including a trip to Yellowstone and Arches. Never had an issue with power on that truck. So am familiar and comfortable with reving the engine for the power.
Which would you choose and why?
You must remember if you get a gas engine they will look funny at you when you pull in at night in a new camp ground, there will be no lawn chair set out for you. Then on the good side of it, your pickup will not smoke, shake, smell, make all that noise, your fuel will cost 70 cents per gal less than diesel, and not tract on your carpet, diesel repairs are double, and the guy down the street will tell all the neighors you don't understand the power you lost.
Not sure where you are buying your fuel but in North Phoenix I'm at $3.59/gal for diesel while 89 0ctane gas is 3.09 so 50 cents. As you are supercharged figure $3.35/gal so difference is 24 cents. Not to long ago Diesel was the same as gas.
Whether diesel or gas makes since depends on your needs. With the weight of my 11.5 ft Caribou camper and M105A3 trailer Diesel just made sense. I have not found repairs are twice as much but have found they occur half as often. 1999 F550 7.3 powerstroke.
I also own a 94 supercharged F150 lightning.
F550 diesel get the heavy lifting done.
F150 gasser runs the 11 sec 1/4 mile.
Right tool for the right job.