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Questions on road testing of 2017 Ford 250 and 350

womps
Explorer
Explorer
Before I ordered a 2017 350 Superduty I read many road tests. Car and Driver gave the 350 three stars out of five. Biggest fault was rough ride. They tested a similar 250 and give it a five out of five. Biggest reason, smooth ride. I tested both out on the same road back to back before ordering. Both with 18 inch wheels and the FX4 package. I couldn't tell a difference. Car and driver has the 2017 Duramax showing the best miles per gallon on their test loop, the Cummins second and the Powerstroke third but only 2 mpg separating the top to bottom. Motor Trend in their Truck of the Year evaluation has the Superduty beating the Cummins by over 4 mpg on their test loop. I wonder why such variance. One possible reason could be a regen happening during the mileage test and the reviewer isn't savvy enough to know the difference.
21 REPLIES 21

alexleblanc
Explorer
Explorer
Me Again wrote:
Until you know to tire inflation differences between the two the ride comparison of the two is meaningless.

80 in the rear of our SRW 3500 makes it ride like a brick truck empty. Lower rears to around 45-50, greatly increases ride quality.


Quoted for truth - mine arrived with 80PSI in the rear tires, it rode noticeably worse than with 60-65PSI in them like the F250 I had tried would of had.

I lowered mine to 65PSI and I have no complaints since.
TV - 2017 F350 CCSB SRW Platinum 6.7 + 5er - 2021 Grand Design Reflection 311 BHS + B&W Companion
On Order - 2022 F350 CCSB SRW Platinum 6.7

nremtp143
Explorer
Explorer
tatest wrote:
Ride quality is subjective.


DITTO! All that should be different between the 250/350 are the rear springs now. Another possibility would be that either one was supplied with a camper package or snow plow prep package. These two options change the spring rate. Plus, a stiff ride to you may mean a firm ride to me. "Similarly equipped" can mean different things to different people. For instance, our new truck to pull the mass casualty trailer at work is a '16 F250 4x4 6.2L gasser that was replacing a '12 F250 4x4 6.7L diesel. The new one with the gas engine will jar you to death, but the 6.7L rode great. I'd have to compare window stickers line for line with the weight differences and the options before deciding anything like that.
2016 Montana 3790RD, Legacy Edition, G614s, TST TPMS
2008 Thor Vortex 26FS
2013 F350 DRW 6.7L 4x4, Edge CTS, B&W Companion, Viair 10007 Air System, Firestone Air Bags
2001 Excursion Limited 7.3L 4x4, V/B Springs
2001 Silverado 3500 DRW CCLB 8.1L/Allison 4x4

dodge_guy
Explorer II
Explorer II
Magazines reviews are a joke. I`ve seen the same types of tests. they give a bad review because a truck rides too hard? really, that's what it is for! I`ve seen the same complaints on sports cars, too rough a ride as one of the negatives, seriously. I`ve also see other crazy complaints, like a minivan with not enough side bolstering in the seats, such as when tested on a track!

They aren't worth even reading anymore, which I don't.

The reviewers need to realize what they are testing and not compare it to something that it isn't!
Wife Kim
Son Brandon 17yrs
Daughter Marissa 16yrs
Dog Bailey

12 Forest River Georgetown 350TS Hellwig sway bars, BlueOx TrueCenter stabilizer

13 Ford Explorer Roadmaster Stowmaster 5000, VIP Tow>
A bad day camping is
better than a good day at work!

4x4ord
Explorer III
Explorer III
My 2016 F350 gets poor fuel economy. My brother has an identical Platinum F350 which I drive on occasion...it gets slightly better. I have an employee who just bought a new F350 with 3:31 gears. I drove it the other day and it appears to use about 25% less fuel than mine does with 3.55 gears.

If you want a nice ride buy a Chevy.
2023 F350 SRW Platinum short box 4x4.
B&W Companion
2008 Citation Platinum XL 34.5

tatest
Explorer II
Explorer II
Ride quality is subjective.
Tom Test
Itasca Spirit 29B

Redwoodcamper
Explorer
Explorer
patriotgrunt wrote:


I love a Cummins diesel but when you're talking about trucks, what surrounds it is questionable in quality. Talking about generators is one thing while trucks are another. And before you label me a Ram hater just realize that I used to be a loyal customer who's owned three Dodges.


I don't blame you. My 98 Dodge and 07 had sub par bodies and interiors. My 11 has 278+ k miles and not one rattle. Everything electronic works just like new. Only complaint is the seat. I think the have improved a huge amount in quality.
2011 ram 3500. Cummins 68rfe. EFI live. 276k miles and climbing.
2017 keystone bullet 204

ACZL
Explorer
Explorer
FWIW, here's my take:

You want a vehicle that gets good MPG's, get a econo-box car.
You want a vehicle to tow, get a truck (your choice--they are all good).
You want a vehicle that rides, smooth, get a Caddy or Lincoln.
You want a vehicle that will haul "X" but know your in a vehicle built to haul, get a truck.

MFR's have to decide wether or not they want their trucks to either ride smooth or harsh and yet still retain HD payloads/towing. I bought a truck to tow and haul with. Doesn't bother me any if it rides a tad rough and if I feel the pebble I ran over. If just cruising and not towing, will take the car.
2017 F350 DRW XLT, CC, 4x4, 6.7
2018 Big Country 3560 SS
"The best part of RVing and Snowmobiling is spending time with family and friends"
"Catin' in the Winter"

FishOnOne
Nomad
Nomad
The problem that most people don't consider when measuring fuel economy for a diesel powered truck is the "Regen" process. In one of these fuel economy tests all it takes for one truck to regen and the other two don't and that truck will have lowest fuel economy every time.

In order to get real fuel economy on a diesel truck is to drive the truck from 1 regen to the 2nd regen and then measure fuel economy. The engine that regen's the least frequent will have the best fuel economy.

BTW... Congrats on that new 2017 Super Duty 6.7PSD. They're a jewel. If I were ordering a truck today it would be hands down another F350 6.7 Power Stroke.
'12 Ford Super Duty FX4 ELD CC 6.7 PSD 400HP 800ft/lbs "270k Miles"
'16 Sprinter 319MKS "Wide Body"

womps
Explorer
Explorer
Me Again wrote:
Until you know to tire inflation differences between the two the ride comparison of the two is meaningless.

80 in the rear of our SRW 3500 makes it ride like a brick truck empty. Lower rears to around 45-50, greatly increases ride quality.


They both had 60 in the front and 80 in the rear. Checked by the service department after my test drive.

patriotgrunt
Explorer
Explorer
Redwoodcamper wrote:
Think about this. In the diesel community, there are literally tens of thousands of Cummins swaps into other truck bodies. There are about a dozen swaps of a Ford engine into another truck body, and a few hundred Duramax swaps. Next time you go to a small hospital or radio station or police station go out back and see what kind of generator they have. It will have a big "c" on the side for Cummins, because it has to work. Every time. Even if Ford sold generators, no one would buy them.
Fast lane truck found the ram had the best mileage of the new three. They all are very comparable. If you don't work on the truck yourself, or if you don't keep them for more than 100k miles, then they will all treat you well. If you work on it yourself the Cummins is the smart choice. Parts are cheaper, much faster to install. Out of my last three Dodge/Rams I have nearly one million miles racked up with very few problems. Just my opinion.


I love a Cummins diesel but when you're talking about trucks, what surrounds it is questionable in quality. Talking about generators is one thing while trucks are another. And before you label me a Ram hater just realize that I used to be a loyal customer who's owned three Dodges.
2015 Ford F-250, 6.7 PSD
2016 Ford Expedition, 3.5 Eco-Boost
2003 Ford F-150, 4.2 V6
Sandpiper 357 TRIP

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
So what was the question?
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Me_Again
Explorer III
Explorer III
Until you know to tire inflation differences between the two the ride comparison of the two is meaningless.

80 in the rear of our SRW 3500 makes it ride like a brick truck empty. Lower rears to around 45-50, greatly increases ride quality.
2021 F150 2.7 Ecoboost - Summer Home 2017 Bighorn 3575el. Can Am Spyder RT-L Chrome, Kawasaki KRX1000. Retired and enjoying it! RIP DW 07-05-2021

womps
Explorer
Explorer
Redwoodcamper wrote:
Think about this. In the diesel community, there are literally tens of thousands of Cummins swaps into other truck bodies. There are about a dozen swaps of a Ford engine into another truck body, and a few hundred Duramax swaps. Next time you go to a small hospital or radio station or police station go out back and see what kind of generator they have. It will have a big "c" on the side for Cummins, because it has to work. Every time. Even if Ford sold generators, no one would buy them.
Fast lane truck found the ram had the best mileage of the new three. They all are very comparable. If you don't work on the truck yourself, or if you don't keep them for more than 100k miles, then they will all treat you well. If you work on it yourself the Cummins is the smart choice. Parts are cheaper, much faster to install. Out of my last three Dodge/Rams I have nearly one million miles racked up with very few problems. Just my opinion.


Totally agree including the fuel economy. That's what makes you wonder the low fuel economy test by Motor Trend. Same loop driven same driver and speed. But fuel economy is all over the place in the real world. The confusing part is the huge ride difference between the 250 and 350 according to Car & Driver yet so many owners say no difference noted in the real world. Uh!

Redwoodcamper
Explorer
Explorer
Think about this. In the diesel community, there are literally tens of thousands of Cummins swaps into other truck bodies. There are about a dozen swaps of a Ford engine into another truck body, and a few hundred Duramax swaps. Next time you go to a small hospital or radio station or police station go out back and see what kind of generator they have. It will have a big "c" on the side for Cummins, because it has to work. Every time. Even if Ford sold generators, no one would buy them.
Fast lane truck found the ram had the best mileage of the new three. They all are very comparable. If you don't work on the truck yourself, or if you don't keep them for more than 100k miles, then they will all treat you well. If you work on it yourself the Cummins is the smart choice. Parts are cheaper, much faster to install. Out of my last three Dodge/Rams I have nearly one million miles racked up with very few problems. Just my opinion.
2011 ram 3500. Cummins 68rfe. EFI live. 276k miles and climbing.
2017 keystone bullet 204