Dec-14-2019 08:57 AM
Dec-27-2019 01:18 PM
All I could afford wrote:
I remember riding in the middle seat position between grandpa and grandma in the old Chevy 6.2 Liter Diesel, chugging along in the right lane and loosing speed on any inclines, as I watched the black smoke puff out in the mirror
Dec-27-2019 12:02 PM
Me Again wrote:Huntindog wrote:4x4ord wrote:It is even worse than you state. In 2015, all of the big three limited TQ in at least 1st gear to protect the rear end. A 3.31 is stronger than a 4.30. GM has publicly stated that full power is now available in every gear.
An interesting point when looking at the 10 speed in a new F350 vs the 6 speed in a 2015 model is this:
The max rear wheel torque at 1600 engine rpm in low gear (disregarding parasitic losses) in 2020 with 3.31 final gears is:
1050 x 4.615 x 3.31 or 16,039 lb ft.
In 2015 the max torque of the f450 with 4.30 final drive in low gear was:
860 x 3.97 x 4.30 or 14,681 lb ft.
I haven't heard about the others yet.
That thing about diff gear would apply to the 4.615 and 3.97 tranny gears, with the 3.97 being stronger that the 4.615?
Dec-27-2019 11:12 AM
Dec-27-2019 06:40 AM
All I could afford wrote:
Even more torque multiplication available from the torque converter. How much trucks have changed in the the last 20 years
Dec-27-2019 04:08 AM
Huntindog wrote:4x4ord wrote:It is even worse than you state. In 2015, all of the big three limited TQ in at least 1st gear to protect the rear end. A 3.31 is stronger than a 4.30. GM has publicly stated that full power is now available in every gear.
An interesting point when looking at the 10 speed in a new F350 vs the 6 speed in a 2015 model is this:
The max rear wheel torque at 1600 engine rpm in low gear (disregarding parasitic losses) in 2020 with 3.31 final gears is:
1050 x 4.615 x 3.31 or 16,039 lb ft.
In 2015 the max torque of the f450 with 4.30 final drive in low gear was:
860 x 3.97 x 4.30 or 14,681 lb ft.
I haven't heard about the others yet.
Dec-27-2019 03:18 AM
Dec-26-2019 11:56 PM
4x4ord wrote:It is even worse than you state. In 2015, all of the big three limited TQ in at least 1st gear to protect the rear end. A 3.31 is stronger than a 4.30. GM has publicly stated that full power is now available in every gear.
An interesting point when looking at the 10 speed in a new F350 vs the 6 speed in a 2015 model is this:
The max rear wheel torque at 1600 engine rpm in low gear (disregarding parasitic losses) in 2020 with 3.31 final gears is:
1050 x 4.615 x 3.31 or 16,039 lb ft.
In 2015 the max torque of the f450 with 4.30 final drive in low gear was:
860 x 3.97 x 4.30 or 14,681 lb ft.
Dec-26-2019 10:00 PM
Dec-16-2019 09:01 PM
4x4ord wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
For the fun of it, I pulled up a gear ratio to speed calculator:
With the ford 2.7turbo, 3.73 rear end, 4.86 reverse gear and 32" diameter tires...30mph is 5710rpm. Redline is listed as 5800rpm...Assuming you aren't running around all day in reverse, this shouldn't harm the engine.
If you drop back to 25mph, it's a much more sedate 4750rpm.
So even with the really deep granny reverse gear, you can tow (push?) at 30mph on occasion (at least theoretically).
I'm still trying to figure out what scenario this makes any sense.
- If you have any significant room that the slightest mistake doesn't put you into the ditch/wall, it's easier to turn the rig around.
- If its a tight narrow twisty road where you can't turn around, you just increase the difficulty level 10 fold getting up to 30mph (regardless of gear ratio)
Update: Looks like if you have the diesel, you are limited to around 20mph in reverse as the engine is governed at 3700rpm.
I'm not 100% sure what the gear ratio was for reverse in 2017. 2020 6r140s have a -3.4:1 and I've seen values of both -3.12:1 and -3.28:1 for the 6r140 as well. I have the 3.55 axle ratio and I believe 34" rubber mounted on my 20" rims.
Dec-16-2019 12:35 PM
Dec-16-2019 10:39 AM
2001400ex wrote:blofgren wrote:
The 6 speed trans in my 2012 F150 work truck drives me nuts at times with it's constant shifting; I can just imagine what these ones must be like.......
I'm not sure how Ford will end up. But in my 2020 GMC Duramax. You really don't notice the shifts. The nice thing, since the spacing is less between gears, it seems natural. I haven't towed heavy other than around the block basically but it wasn't hunting the few minutes I was on the freeway. And you still have the option to lock out top gears.
Dec-16-2019 08:49 AM
blofgren wrote:
The 6 speed trans in my 2012 F150 work truck drives me nuts at times with it's constant shifting; I can just imagine what these ones must be like.......
Dec-16-2019 07:38 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
For the fun of it, I pulled up a gear ratio to speed calculator:
With the ford 2.7turbo, 3.73 rear end, 4.86 reverse gear and 32" diameter tires...30mph is 5710rpm. Redline is listed as 5800rpm...Assuming you aren't running around all day in reverse, this shouldn't harm the engine.
If you drop back to 25mph, it's a much more sedate 4750rpm.
So even with the really deep granny reverse gear, you can tow (push?) at 30mph on occasion (at least theoretically).
I'm still trying to figure out what scenario this makes any sense.
- If you have any significant room that the slightest mistake doesn't put you into the ditch/wall, it's easier to turn the rig around.
- If its a tight narrow twisty road where you can't turn around, you just increase the difficulty level 10 fold getting up to 30mph (regardless of gear ratio)
Update: Looks like if you have the diesel, you are limited to around 20mph in reverse as the engine is governed at 3700rpm.
Dec-16-2019 03:57 AM