Dec-29-2013 04:21 PM
Jan-12-2014 01:43 PM
Jan-12-2014 01:37 PM
JacintoKid wrote:And I have a neighbor who has a hemi and I can hear him coming a quarter of a mile away. Makes more noise than my 10 year old Cummins.rooney77 wrote:
I don't get the whole warm up cool down thing. By the time I've pulled into the campsite no cool down is needed and it's got a grid heater to warm it up. I crank and go and kill it when I get there. I get aggravated by people that leave their junk idling all the time like that.
I have a neighbor who used to wake up the whole neighborhood idling his 01' 24 valve Cummins. I had the exact same truck and informed him that the engine wouldn't start to warm until he started driving and got the RPM's up. He didn't listen but thankfully, he sold the truck last year. I guess some folks love watching money exit the tailpipe.
Jan-12-2014 11:47 AM
JumboJet wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
And how often do you drive into a 30mph headwind when the temp is 105f? If it's one time over the life of the truck, I'll happily save $10k up front to live with 1 day of slow driving.
I live in the southwest part of the country and I drive into 30 mph headwinds quite often. It gets hot in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona where we travel the most.
$10,000 is not much for me when I compare it with what I was trying to do with a gas equipped truck before I bought my first diesel in 1999.
Jan-09-2014 07:20 PM
Jan-09-2014 02:31 PM
Jan-09-2014 01:41 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
And how often do you drive into a 30mph headwind when the temp is 105f? If it's one time over the life of the truck, I'll happily save $10k up front to live with 1 day of slow driving.
Jan-09-2014 12:56 PM
JumboJet wrote:Redsky wrote:
There are emotional reasons for buying a diesel pickup as there are for having a Hummer or having a truck lifted and putting on 35 inch tires and that is OK as it a person's right to be illogical if it is their money they are spending. But trying to make it sound like the smart thing to do is a waste of time and not being entirely honest, both with oneself and with others.
Since my truck is used for duties other than hauling a TC, I guess your post has me covered somewhat.
But, stating that it is not a "smart thing", a "waste of time". and "not being entirely honest" is a little strong.
Load identical models, excepting the engines, with the identical campers and run them side-by-side for thousands of miles up and down the mountains, into 25-30 mph headwinds, etc. and see which delivers the better performance and reliability.
Ask the man I ran into in Clinton, OK while driving into a 30 mph headwind while the temperature was 105F and his new Chevrolet 8.1 gas engine equipped 2500 if he wished he had purchased a diesel equipped pickup.
Jan-09-2014 06:06 AM
Jan-09-2014 05:57 AM
JumboJet wrote:mlts22 wrote:
I also looked at the places that diesel is sold, and it would mean a pretty long wait to fuel up when needing to get to work (usually one pump at most), while finding a gas stall isn't too much of a headache.
Finding diesel in Austin, TX is a difficult chore? I live in NW Arkansas and every station has multiple diesel pumps.
Casey's and Kum & Go's are being built on every corner and they have a minimum of 8 pumps with diesel.
I entered Austin, TX in GasBuddy on my SmartPhone and found 51 stations in Austin with diesel fuel. Those are the ones being reported so there would be more.
Jan-09-2014 05:05 AM
mlts22 wrote:
I also looked at the places that diesel is sold, and it would mean a pretty long wait to fuel up when needing to get to work (usually one pump at most), while finding a gas stall isn't too much of a headache.
Jan-08-2014 09:05 PM
Jan-07-2014 09:02 AM
Jan-07-2014 05:17 AM
JumboJet wrote:Redsky wrote:
There are emotional reasons for buying a diesel pickup as there are for having a Hummer or having a truck lifted and putting on 35 inch tires and that is OK as it a person's right to be illogical if it is their money they are spending. But trying to make it sound like the smart thing to do is a waste of time and not being entirely honest, both with oneself and with others.
Since my truck is used for duties other than hauling a TC, I guess your post has me covered somewhat.
But, stating that it is not a "smart thing", a "waste of time". and "not being entirely honest" is a little strong.
Load identical models, excepting the engines, with the identical campers and run them side-by-side for thousands of miles up and down the mountains, into 25-30 mph headwinds, etc. and see which delivers the better performance and reliability.
Ask the man I ran into in Clinton, OK while driving into a 30 mph headwind while the temperature was 105F and his new Chevrolet 8.1 gas engine equipped 2500 if he wished he had purchased a diesel equipped pickup.
Jan-07-2014 05:15 AM
JumboJet wrote:Redsky wrote:
There are emotional reasons for buying a diesel pickup as there are for having a Hummer or having a truck lifted and putting on 35 inch tires and that is OK as it a person's right to be illogical if it is their money they are spending. But trying to make it sound like the smart thing to do is a waste of time and not being entirely honest, both with oneself and with others.
Since my truck is used for duties other than hauling a TC, I guess your post has me covered somewhat.
But, stating that it is not a "smart thing", a "waste of time". and "not being entirely honest" is a little strong.
Load identical models, excepting the engines, with the identical campers and run them side-by-side for thousands of miles up and down the mountains, into 25-30 mph headwinds, etc. and see which delivers the better performance and reliability.
Ask the man I ran into in Clinton, OK while driving into a 30 mph headwind while the temperature was 105F and his new Chevrolet 8.1 gas engine equipped 2500 if he wished he had purchased a diesel equipped pickup.