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Ford and Chevy get all twisted up

jefe_4x4
Explorer
Explorer
With Fox off the Dish air, I now have a little time to browse other on-line providers. I've been wrestling with frame twist and how it effects the new Ford all aluminum frame 1 series, and other current series 1-3 products. Here is a link to something that may be of interest to potential TC buyers. Paste this in your browser:
http://blog.caranddriver.com/chevrolet-rolls-its-own-silverado-hd-vs-ford-f-250-in-pickup-flex-fest-video/
Of course there is no weight in the bed like there would be with a moderate sized TC , but this test is an indication for us. As usual, Ford is the flexiest. There was no head to head with a Dodge.
It will be interesting to see if the young engineers at Ford have really done their homework with the new series-1 and all aluminum TC lashup. Someone on here needs to be the test guinea pig for the rest of us. We will, as a loving and responsive group offer either cudos or condolences, depending.
jefe
'01.5 Dodge 2500 4x4, CTD, Qcab, SB, NV5600, 241HD, 4.10's, Dana 70/TruTrac; Dana 80/ TruTrac, Spintec hub conversion, H.D. susp, 315/75R16's on 7.5" and 10" wide steel wheels, Vulcan big line, Warn M15K winch '98 Lance Lite 165s, 8' 6" X-cab, 200w Solar
26 REPLIES 26

dave17352
Explorer
Explorer
In Blair nebraska I saw a car lot with thousand or more steel bodied vehicles that all looked like moonscape. A vicious hailstorm with baseball sized hail and high winds. Steel or aluminum they would have been creamed.
NOW 2017 Leprechaun 260ds
2005 Forrest River Cardinal 29rkle FW
1998 Lance 980 11'3" TC
2017 CHEVY 3500 SRW 6.0
B@W turnover ball @ companion Hitch
Honda eu3000 generator mounted on cargo rack
Crestliner 1850 Fish Ski boat mostly fishing now!

free_radical
Explorer
Explorer
Terryallan wrote:
tuna fisher wrote:
Still don't like that idea, dent very easy. Can you imagine what a shopping cart will do? More than a scratch I bet.


Dude. You do know it's NOT beer can aluminum... Right? you do know passenger jets are made of aluminum. and I believe the highest end RVs like Airstream are made from aluminum.
You should not be afraid of aluminum. As for dents. No one fixes dents any more. They just replace the body part with a new one. Less trouble, and less expensive.

Is that Ford truck made of same aluminium as the jets??

I'd think the jet would be bit stronger better grade,who knows?

I've seen an Airstream roof and front damaged by hail so bad it looked like a surface of the moon LOL. And totaly impossible to fix cheaply..

free_radical
Explorer
Explorer
brholt wrote:
Not to cause trouble :B but some people aren't very happy with boxed frames:
Boxed frame rust

There are plenty of holes openings to spray undercoating oil even on the inside of GM boxed frames,,
I use only one spray can of Rust Check before each winter and haven't a frame rust yet in over 20 years of driving here..

69_Avion
Explorer
Explorer
brholt wrote:
Not to cause trouble :B but some people aren't very happy with boxed frames:

Boxed frame rust


There was another online picture of a Chevy frame breaking in two when it was lifted onto a hoist. There is no doubt that the boxed frame can, and will, rust from the inside. The inside doesn't get coated with rust protection and that really creates a place where rust will thrive. There is no doubt that a boxed frame has more resistance to twisting, but that only becomes a real issue if you plan on subjecting your frame to some serious angles with a heavy load on it. If you are doing that, you need to be concerned with over stressing the axles. The frames are made to twist. I have built many trailers with both structural channel and rectangular tubing. I prefer the structural channel, not because of the twisting but because they are easier to completely coat with paint and they are more forgiving when welding on them. The rectangular tubing can warp easier when you weld on them, but they are easier to fit the pieces since most cuts are square, whereas channel needs to be tapered to fit the crossmembers which is a lot more work.
Ford F-350 4x4 Diesel
1988 Avion Triple Axle Trailer
1969 Avion C-11 Camper

arto_wa
Explorer
Explorer
jimh425 wrote:
I don't really care if my frame flexes or not, and also don't care if it is a few pounds lighter or gets slightly better mpg. It's fun from an academic argument perspective, but most trucks have been quite good for the past 15 years, and there have been very few advances for the past 10 years.




I think the F-150 aluminum body saves about 700 lbs, which is little more than few pounds... and I doubt it has anything to do with frame flexing.
99 F350 4x4 CC DRW 7.3L PSD, 97 Bigfoot 2500 10.6
(11,900#)

89 Duckworth 17' Pro 302

mlts22
Explorer
Explorer
Another large advancement has been the CAN bus, and ECM/TCM matching. My current F-150 has no mechanical throttle. The cruise control and accelerator are all completely handled by the ECM.

It is only getting more interesting... Mercedes is speccing a 7 speed auto to get a four-banger in the Sprinter to be able to handle such a heavy vehicle, and Fiat has a 9 speed AMT transmission in the works.

Ford's EcoBoost technology is also maturing. At first, it was good for car engines, but proved itself in the F-150, and I would not be surprised to see an EB V-8 in a forthcoming 3/4 to 1 ton. The advantage of this is the engine loses significantly less power at higher elevations.

I think the AMT transmissions will definitely be where future improvements go. Essentially it is a manual gearbox, with the computer handling the clutch and shiftwork.

As for frame twisting, does the 2015 F-150 apply to 3/4 tons and up which are the mainstay for truck campers? I'd say the biggest issue before frame twist ever rears its head the half ton's payload capacity.

twodownzero
Explorer
Explorer
jimh425 wrote:
I don't really care if my frame flexes or not, and also don't care if it is a few pounds lighter or gets slightly better mpg. It's fun from an academic argument perspective, but most trucks have been quite good for the past 15 years, and there have been very few advances for the past 10 years.


There have been a LOT of advancements in the last 10-15 years. The biggest one I can think of in trucks is 6 speed automatic transmissions replacing 4 speed automatics. That is an absolutely monumental difference--automatic transmissions haven't gained 50% more gears since the Powerglide was replaced with its predecessor automatics, and that was over 50 years ago.

brholt
Explorer II
Explorer II
Not to cause trouble :B but some people aren't very happy with boxed frames:

Boxed frame rust

silversand
Explorer
Explorer
I like our open "C" channel ladder frame, with boxed frame under the entire engine area. The open C is extremely good a vertical load handling/stability (look at tractors pulling trailers), and is less rigid in torsional dimension (bringing loads over hilly terrain, the C channel torsional flexibility is needed to keep all 4 wheels on the ground, all the while providing exceptional vertical load stability with the C). Open C under the load bed area needs a different leaf spring rate design (just as rear boxed needs a different leaf spring design when compared to open C springing).

...if we ever had to go with a newer truck (God forbid), I would do everything in my power to source a truck/frame with open "C" channel, with ladders under the load-bearing part and engine/tranny of the new truck (I hope this would not have to be an MDt or Class 8 !)...
Silver
2004 Chevy Silverado 2500HD 4x4 6.0L Ext/LB Tow Package 4L80E Michelin AT2s| Outfitter Caribou

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
When you're talking about a truck in the class of the F150, "a few (hundred) pounds lighter" is HUGE because the limiting factor on these has always been payload payload payload. Now you are looking at nearly 2000lbs of payload capacity in a typical truck instead of a hard-to-find-without-ordering, stripped-down model. You can tow that 7000lb bunkhouse with the 1000lb tongue weight, and bring along your wife, the three teenage linebacker sons, and the St. Bernard without putting the truck several hundred pounds over GVWR and probably exceeding the rear axle rating too.

When your F150 is also your daily driver, "slightly better MPG" adds up too. If you're only driving the truck to haul the RV somewhere it's not such a big deal, sure.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

Victory402
Explorer
Explorer
All good input and I'm glad this topic has been brought to the table. I'm seriously considering an F150 for 2016.

RZAR66
Explorer
Explorer
dave17352 wrote:
RZAR66 wrote:
Better to have the frame flex than crack.


But if it flexes a few to many times it will crack right?


It is possible. But every medium duty to class 8 big rig I work on have open C channel frames like the Ford and they do just fine. Not saying a boxed frame isn't good but it makes it more difficult for upfitters to run accessory hydraulic and electrical hoses and lines along the frame work. That's one of the reasons you see many more Ford's upfitted commercially.
2018 Ford F-350 DRW
2024 Northern Lite 10-2

dave17352
Explorer
Explorer
RZAR66 wrote:
Better to have the frame flex than crack.


But if it flexes a few to many times it will crack right?
NOW 2017 Leprechaun 260ds
2005 Forrest River Cardinal 29rkle FW
1998 Lance 980 11'3" TC
2017 CHEVY 3500 SRW 6.0
B@W turnover ball @ companion Hitch
Honda eu3000 generator mounted on cargo rack
Crestliner 1850 Fish Ski boat mostly fishing now!

RZAR66
Explorer
Explorer
Better to have the frame flex than crack.
2018 Ford F-350 DRW
2024 Northern Lite 10-2