โSep-28-2016 01:00 PM
โOct-01-2016 07:25 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
That's true Shiner but that's a % number.
IOW's the 2500 lost 13 more HP than the ED. That 13 HP has to be accounted for in the burning of 13 HP worth of fuel.
And who knows if the fan was lockup up on the dyno? Big fans take big HP away from the engine. It's a lot easier to keep 240 HP cool instead of 370 or even almost 400 in the case of the newest HP Cummins. Another problem is the rea
Look at the chart on page 10 of this Cat study. Over a 50 HP loss on a RW pusher! That's a bunch! I know I have read dyno charts on my 06 Dmax and the fan on it will take away about 27 HP when it kicks on.
All of these things that help duty cycle on the 2500 will take away from efficiency. Lighter duty parts will help the efficiency of the 1500 big time.
At would be interesting to see the BSFC figures of both engines. Just the engines. No drive train or any of that. I know of no way to get those figures though. :M
โOct-01-2016 01:51 PM
โOct-01-2016 12:50 PM
Adam R wrote:
Shiner,
We keep talking past one another. I agree, the 3.0 Eco is better optimized for lighter loads, no disagreement there. There is a 7 mpg difference between a V-6 and V-8 Camaro too. Same chassis, different engine that is designed to provide a different driving experience. Hook 14K up to the Eco diesel and you've just become a public nuisance and a danger to others on the road and mileage will be nearly equal to a 6.7. Getting 30 mpg out of a 6.7 is going to be tough unless you can de-activate a few cylinders and yes, I've seen the article where they lowered the cD to the point where it could eek out 30 mpg. Not practical for most of us, but you'll always get better mpg by reducing the amount of air a vehicle has to move through.
Adam R wrote:
If an Eco does what you need a truck to do, then that is the tool for you. Bottom line is that a 3.0 Eco that puts out 900 ft lbs and backed up a factory warranty is not likely any time soon.
Adam R wrote:
And, the there still a weight and cD difference in the comparison between the 1500 and 2500 so it's still not exactly apples to apples. Not necessarily a bad comparison, but I'll gladly give up a few mpg for a far more capable truck.
Adam
โOct-01-2016 12:13 PM
โOct-01-2016 11:38 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:ShinerBock wrote:Adam R wrote:RinconVTR wrote:
A C&D mag not long ago showed cars/trucks from 20 years ago compared to now. Time and time again, HP/TQ we vastly increased, and MPG was flat-lined.
Diesels pre-2006 we mostly true diesels and could deliver good power with good fuel economy. Today they deal with tough emission standards and have a scary and costly array of components to scrub and chemically clean what comes out the tail pipe. It's insane, and it doesn't result in loss of power exactly, it results in less fuel economy. They might beat gassers still, but the gap has closed drastically as I'm seeing real world towing reports that average only 10% better than gas, if that. Then enter the debate of cost to own.
Regarding MPG of various HP motors...first of all no one is using all available power unless they are WOT. Which SO many people are afraid to do, for fear they are hurting their motor. I am not afraid of WOT.
For more than 2 seasons each, I towed the very same aero shape TT weighing 4300lbs loaded, with a Honda Pilot and Toyota Sequoia.
The Pilot has a 3.5L V6 and the Sequoia a 5.7L V8. Roughly 250hp (Gen2 Pilot) vs 380hp.
They both returned the VERY SAME MPG AVERAGE while towing.
Not towing, I would commonly see 20-22mpg. The Sequoia I commonly see 15-16mpg.
Yep, good comparison and more inline with what I've been trying to get the point across. Comparing the 3.0 Eco to a modern 6.7, I would agree the 3.0 Eco would get slightly better mileage than the 6.7 in the same pickup if placed in a 3500 MC, until you put a huge load behind it. The 3.0 does not have any margin for carrying or moving loads at the upper end of a 3500's rated capabilities. The 3.0 is better optimized for smaller loads and commuting duties, but you cannot expect it to safely pull an 18,000 lb trailer which requires more HP, a heavier chassis, etc.
For another mileage comparison, I have a 1984 Toyota 2L (2.4L)diesel 4x4 pickup. It came NA and returned a whopping 20-21 mpg. I grafted a turbo and intercooler onto it, cranked up it's fuel screw and doubled it's rated hp output (21 lbs of boost) to achieve 28 mpg on the highway. This is 1984 technology mind you and since I've been driving it for 21 years, I'm pretty familiar with it. I now drive a 2007 Ford S-Max 1.725L turbo diesel and I get 40-42 mpg which is a little disappointing since the S-max is far lighter, smaller and much more aerodynamic than my clapped out Toyota. This all goes to say that other than exhaust cleaning advances, I would say the technology to burn fuel has not grown by leaps and bounds. A little yes, but not a lot.
Actually the loaded and unloaded testing of the two engines like RinconVTR is saying has already been done a few years ago by Truck Trend. They did a 500 mile test loop both unloaded with the Ecodiesel netting 28.47 mpg and the Cummins 19.97. That is in no way shape or form a slight difference in mpg.
Then they loaded up the same 7,020 lbs up to both trucks on a 260 mile test loop. The Ecodiesel did struggle a bit and lost speed going up a 7% grade, but it returned 19.46 mpg. The Cummins of course did not struggle one bit pulling it with ease, and it returned 15.82 mpg.
2014 Ram 1500 EcoDiesel vs. 2014 Ram 2500 - Sibling Rivalry
All of that energy (fuel) is being used up by the drive train. It takes a lot of energy to turn a super heavy crankshaft and torque converter and tranny internals and super big and heavy drive shaft and rear end gears and on it goes...........They need that super heavy crankshaft and everything in back of it to keep the duty cycle up. Can you make 450 HP from the 3.0? Sure! But the duty cycle would go to hell and it would no longer be a HD pickup.
โOct-01-2016 11:08 AM
ShinerBock wrote:Adam R wrote:RinconVTR wrote:
A C&D mag not long ago showed cars/trucks from 20 years ago compared to now. Time and time again, HP/TQ we vastly increased, and MPG was flat-lined.
Diesels pre-2006 we mostly true diesels and could deliver good power with good fuel economy. Today they deal with tough emission standards and have a scary and costly array of components to scrub and chemically clean what comes out the tail pipe. It's insane, and it doesn't result in loss of power exactly, it results in less fuel economy. They might beat gassers still, but the gap has closed drastically as I'm seeing real world towing reports that average only 10% better than gas, if that. Then enter the debate of cost to own.
Regarding MPG of various HP motors...first of all no one is using all available power unless they are WOT. Which SO many people are afraid to do, for fear they are hurting their motor. I am not afraid of WOT.
For more than 2 seasons each, I towed the very same aero shape TT weighing 4300lbs loaded, with a Honda Pilot and Toyota Sequoia.
The Pilot has a 3.5L V6 and the Sequoia a 5.7L V8. Roughly 250hp (Gen2 Pilot) vs 380hp.
They both returned the VERY SAME MPG AVERAGE while towing.
Not towing, I would commonly see 20-22mpg. The Sequoia I commonly see 15-16mpg.
Yep, good comparison and more inline with what I've been trying to get the point across. Comparing the 3.0 Eco to a modern 6.7, I would agree the 3.0 Eco would get slightly better mileage than the 6.7 in the same pickup if placed in a 3500 MC, until you put a huge load behind it. The 3.0 does not have any margin for carrying or moving loads at the upper end of a 3500's rated capabilities. The 3.0 is better optimized for smaller loads and commuting duties, but you cannot expect it to safely pull an 18,000 lb trailer which requires more HP, a heavier chassis, etc.
For another mileage comparison, I have a 1984 Toyota 2L (2.4L)diesel 4x4 pickup. It came NA and returned a whopping 20-21 mpg. I grafted a turbo and intercooler onto it, cranked up it's fuel screw and doubled it's rated hp output (21 lbs of boost) to achieve 28 mpg on the highway. This is 1984 technology mind you and since I've been driving it for 21 years, I'm pretty familiar with it. I now drive a 2007 Ford S-Max 1.725L turbo diesel and I get 40-42 mpg which is a little disappointing since the S-max is far lighter, smaller and much more aerodynamic than my clapped out Toyota. This all goes to say that other than exhaust cleaning advances, I would say the technology to burn fuel has not grown by leaps and bounds. A little yes, but not a lot.
Actually the loaded and unloaded testing of the two engines like RinconVTR is saying has already been done a few years ago by Truck Trend. They did a 500 mile test loop both unloaded with the Ecodiesel netting 28.47 mpg and the Cummins 19.97. That is in no way shape or form a slight difference in mpg.
Then they loaded up the same 7,020 lbs up to both trucks on a 260 mile test loop. The Ecodiesel did struggle a bit and lost speed going up a 7% grade, but it returned 19.46 mpg. The Cummins of course did not struggle one bit pulling it with ease, and it returned 15.82 mpg.
2014 Ram 1500 EcoDiesel vs. 2014 Ram 2500 - Sibling Rivalry
โOct-01-2016 08:34 AM
Adam R wrote:RinconVTR wrote:
A C&D mag not long ago showed cars/trucks from 20 years ago compared to now. Time and time again, HP/TQ we vastly increased, and MPG was flat-lined.
Diesels pre-2006 we mostly true diesels and could deliver good power with good fuel economy. Today they deal with tough emission standards and have a scary and costly array of components to scrub and chemically clean what comes out the tail pipe. It's insane, and it doesn't result in loss of power exactly, it results in less fuel economy. They might beat gassers still, but the gap has closed drastically as I'm seeing real world towing reports that average only 10% better than gas, if that. Then enter the debate of cost to own.
Regarding MPG of various HP motors...first of all no one is using all available power unless they are WOT. Which SO many people are afraid to do, for fear they are hurting their motor. I am not afraid of WOT.
For more than 2 seasons each, I towed the very same aero shape TT weighing 4300lbs loaded, with a Honda Pilot and Toyota Sequoia.
The Pilot has a 3.5L V6 and the Sequoia a 5.7L V8. Roughly 250hp (Gen2 Pilot) vs 380hp.
They both returned the VERY SAME MPG AVERAGE while towing.
Not towing, I would commonly see 20-22mpg. The Sequoia I commonly see 15-16mpg.
Yep, good comparison and more inline with what I've been trying to get the point across. Comparing the 3.0 Eco to a modern 6.7, I would agree the 3.0 Eco would get slightly better mileage than the 6.7 in the same pickup if placed in a 3500 MC, until you put a huge load behind it. The 3.0 does not have any margin for carrying or moving loads at the upper end of a 3500's rated capabilities. The 3.0 is better optimized for smaller loads and commuting duties, but you cannot expect it to safely pull an 18,000 lb trailer which requires more HP, a heavier chassis, etc.
For another mileage comparison, I have a 1984 Toyota 2L (2.4L)diesel 4x4 pickup. It came NA and returned a whopping 20-21 mpg. I grafted a turbo and intercooler onto it, cranked up it's fuel screw and doubled it's rated hp output (21 lbs of boost) to achieve 28 mpg on the highway. This is 1984 technology mind you and since I've been driving it for 21 years, I'm pretty familiar with it. I now drive a 2007 Ford S-Max 1.725L turbo diesel and I get 40-42 mpg which is a little disappointing since the S-max is far lighter, smaller and much more aerodynamic than my clapped out Toyota. This all goes to say that other than exhaust cleaning advances, I would say the technology to burn fuel has not grown by leaps and bounds. A little yes, but not a lot.
โOct-01-2016 05:59 AM
โSep-30-2016 11:26 PM
RinconVTR wrote:
A C&D mag not long ago showed cars/trucks from 20 years ago compared to now. Time and time again, HP/TQ we vastly increased, and MPG was flat-lined.
Diesels pre-2006 we mostly true diesels and could deliver good power with good fuel economy. Today they deal with tough emission standards and have a scary and costly array of components to scrub and chemically clean what comes out the tail pipe. It's insane, and it doesn't result in loss of power exactly, it results in less fuel economy. They might beat gassers still, but the gap has closed drastically as I'm seeing real world towing reports that average only 10% better than gas, if that. Then enter the debate of cost to own.
Regarding MPG of various HP motors...first of all no one is using all available power unless they are WOT. Which SO many people are afraid to do, for fear they are hurting their motor. I am not afraid of WOT.
For more than 2 seasons each, I towed the very same aero shape TT weighing 4300lbs loaded, with a Honda Pilot and Toyota Sequoia.
The Pilot has a 3.5L V6 and the Sequoia a 5.7L V8. Roughly 250hp (Gen2 Pilot) vs 380hp.
They both returned the VERY SAME MPG AVERAGE while towing.
Not towing, I would commonly see 20-22mpg. The Sequoia I commonly see 15-16mpg.
โSep-30-2016 08:24 PM
dodge guy wrote:sparechange wrote:dodge guy wrote:
I think the big thing that some of us are saying is too stop with the HP wars, hold them where they are at and work on mileage instead. I see no reason why the new crop of diesels can't get at least 3+ more MPG! If they they put the effort into that instead of power lots more people would sit up and take notice.
Years ago they said a gas V-8 would never get better than 20 mpg. Guess what mid 20's is what they are now getting!
I agree with most everything you said accept the modern v-8 getting over 20. There's a website that tracks user uploaded mpg by vehicle and year (fuelly.com) and from what I've seen most on average are worse than diesels. Usually around 15-16 combined. I could be wrong but I spent a lot of time looking around on there and talking to guys at work with halftons a couple years ago when I was truck shopping
I had a 97 grand marquis that had no problem getting 26 mpg on the highway it had 2.73's. I also had a 93 mustang with the 5.0 and auto with 3.27 gears that would do 25 on the highway. Yes, these aren't trucks but a very modern V-8 or should not have a problem with low 20's in a truck! Even a diesel should be knocking down upper 20's by now. That is of course if they focused on mileage instead of power!
โSep-30-2016 08:05 PM
โSep-30-2016 07:18 PM
โSep-30-2016 06:55 PM
ShinerBock wrote:
They do. The Ecodiesel makes about the same(if not more) horsepower and more torque than the diesels in 1997 and gets upper 20s mpg. While the diesels with same displacement grew in power to more than double of what they used to back then.
This goes back to what I stated earlier. As technology allows a big liter 6.6/6.7L diesels to gain more energy out of a drop of fuel, its power will increase along with a moderate increase in efficiency. If you want to keep the power the same while having a greater increase in fuel economy, then you would have to go to a smaller displacement engine as fuel efficiency technology improves(i.e. the more energy you are able to get out of a drop of fuel).
โSep-30-2016 04:45 PM
ShinerBock wrote:dodge guy wrote:
I had a 97 grand marquis that had no problem getting 26 mpg on the highway it had 2.73's. I also had a 93 mustang with the 5.0 and auto with 3.27 gears that would do 25 on the highway. Yes, these aren't trucks but a very modern V-8 or should not have a problem with low 20's in a truck! Even a diesel should be knocking down upper 20's by now. That is of course if they focused on mileage instead of power!
They do. The Ecodiesel makes about the same(if not more) horsepower and more torque than the diesels in 1997 and gets upper 20s mpg. While the diesels with same displacement grew in power to more than double of what they used to back then.
This goes back to what I stated earlier. As technology allows a big liter 6.6/6.7L diesels to gain more energy out of a drop of fuel, its power will increase along with a moderate increase in efficiency. If you want to keep the power the same while having a greater increase in fuel economy, then you would have to go to a smaller displacement engine as fuel efficiency technology improves(i.e. the more energy you are able to get out of a drop of fuel).
โSep-30-2016 01:47 PM
dodge guy wrote:
I had a 97 grand marquis that had no problem getting 26 mpg on the highway it had 2.73's. I also had a 93 mustang with the 5.0 and auto with 3.27 gears that would do 25 on the highway. Yes, these aren't trucks but a very modern V-8 or should not have a problem with low 20's in a truck! Even a diesel should be knocking down upper 20's by now. That is of course if they focused on mileage instead of power!