โJul-10-2022 09:23 PM
โJul-11-2022 04:56 PM
noonenosthis1 wrote:
Hi all,
We have an 2015, F350, 6.2,srw, crew cab, 4x4. We tow a Flagstaff 2020 529RLKS, uvw 9631 lbs. We live in California, so just about anywhere you go, you go over a hill, mountain. I would like just a little more power going over the hills. Any ideas? Not getting a different truck, hubby likes this one. He has it set up for pheasant hunting. We live in California so I believe some of the tuners are not an option.
thanks
โJul-11-2022 03:27 PM
โJul-11-2022 03:05 PM
โJul-11-2022 01:05 PM
Grit dog wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
Smaller diameter wheels will help in the sense that they effectively change the gear ratio slightly in your favor (assuming they still have sufficient payload rating)
The difference between 74 and 67 pounds on an 8000lb truck pulling a 12000lb trailer is not going to make any difference.
He was saying 2 different tires the same size weigh close to +/- 70lbs each. Idk what a little 245-75-17 or whatever weighs, but rough guess, little 17" tire/rim combo vs big set of wheels and tires is an easy 20lbs of rotating mass per corner, based on changing many of both.
I good approximation of the effect of rotating mass is about 7:1. Every lb of rotating mass sucks as much power as moving 7lbs of static mass.
Combine gearing efficiency of smaller diameter and effectively 500lbs ish of static mass reduction will help noticeably.
That said, I'd rather have the stability and capacity of larger rims/tires, but certainly not a deal breaker to downsize if searching for a little more snort.
โJul-11-2022 12:05 PM
โJul-11-2022 12:03 PM
โJul-11-2022 11:59 AM
โJul-11-2022 11:23 AM
โJul-11-2022 11:17 AM
The difference between 74 and 67 pounds on an 8000lb truck pulling a 12000lb trailer is not going to make any difference.Agree.
โJul-11-2022 11:16 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
Smaller diameter wheels will help in the sense that they effectively change the gear ratio slightly in your favor (assuming they still have sufficient payload rating)
The difference between 74 and 67 pounds on an 8000lb truck pulling a 12000lb trailer is not going to make any difference.
โJul-11-2022 09:34 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
We quite often see 250/350 owners who bit into towing 14k-15k lbs with the small block 6.2 engine. Many swapped for the same 250/350 with the diesel.
Just to add to MFL on point comment on tire/wheel diameters.
Also I've found with gas small blocks, and big blocks, tire and wheel weight can drag down their towing performance.
Example of a tires weight;..... a BFG Mud Terrain KM3 LT295/70-18" that weighs 74 lbs. Now add the wheel and the little V8 has over 400+ lbs of tires and wheels to keep the load moving.
Even the same brand BFG same tire type in a 17" weighs 67 lbs.
Yeah.... I know we have lighter weight tires out here but this is just a example of parasitic drag on the small engine.
โJul-11-2022 09:22 AM
mkirsch wrote:
Tuners only affect gas engines at WOT. Unless you run around with the gas pedal mashed to the floor, they won't help.
Gearing, smaller tires, do not add power. They allow the engine to spin faster at a given speed, with the caveat that you're stuck with it ALL THE TIME, even not towing.
The most cost effective solution is, if the truck is doing the job now, and you don't want to trade it, to learn to be happy with what you have.
โJul-11-2022 08:36 AM
โJul-11-2022 07:03 AM
โJul-11-2022 06:47 AM