โJul-21-2014 04:03 PM
โJul-30-2014 12:51 PM
retiredtoo wrote:
Owned the V10 or 5 years and now a dodge diesel. I've kept really good records. The Diesel is just as inexpensive to operate as the V10. Diesel is more costly, but the V10 was doing 8 mpg. With the same load on the diesel, I'm getting 13.8 MPG. Wipes out the difference in fuel costs. I had to run 90 octane minimum in the V10, otherwise, O2 sensors and other stuff would get unhappy. Glad I got out of the beast and into the diesel. I bought a used diesel that was cheaper than a new V10. Never looked back. And the torque is a walkaway for the diesel over the V10.
โJul-30-2014 12:42 PM
Area13 wrote:garryk6 wrote:
I currently own two 2000 V-10's and a 2002 5.4V-8. The 5.4 combined with a 6spd manual and with everything loaded up at 10,800lbs and 3.73. It gets 13-15mpg traveling around Alaskan highways, byways and gravel roads. The V-10's vary. They are in two Excursions. One has factory 3.73 gears and stock 265x75x16 tires, one has 4.30 gears and 35x12.50x16.5 tires. both auto. The one with 4.30 gears has banks headers, exhaust, and a Whipple supercharger. On the highway they both get 13-15mpg. Around town the 3.73 gets 8-9 and the 4.30 gets 8-10. But seat of the pants, the 4.30 and Whipple V-10 beats my old 05 6.0 diesel, and my old 02 7.3 diesel hands down. I have owned all these trucks, and have enjoyed them all, but the diesel maintenance and living on an island with no diesel experts, and no highways turned me off the diesels...
Just my personal experience.
Garry
I have driven both the V10 and the 7.3 for years. What is the "Diesel Maintenance" on the 7.3? Don't get it? I change the oil once in a while and just drive it. It is one of the last non emission trouble free diesels you can get.The 7.3 is a MONSTER towing, especially low end and is MUCH better on fuel than the V10. With a few mods I run over 600 Torque on it and barely tap the skinny pedal to pull huge loads. The V10 is nice and quiet, but don't pass any gas pumps. IF the 7.3 needs work (if ever), very simple to work on. Just my experience currently owning both.
โJul-30-2014 01:09 AM
โJul-30-2014 12:26 AM
garryk6 wrote:
I currently own two 2000 V-10's and a 2002 5.4V-8. The 5.4 combined with a 6spd manual and with everything loaded up at 10,800lbs and 3.73. It gets 13-15mpg traveling around Alaskan highways, byways and gravel roads. The V-10's vary. They are in two Excursions. One has factory 3.73 gears and stock 265x75x16 tires, one has 4.30 gears and 35x12.50x16.5 tires. both auto. The one with 4.30 gears has banks headers, exhaust, and a Whipple supercharger. On the highway they both get 13-15mpg. Around town the 3.73 gets 8-9 and the 4.30 gets 8-10. But seat of the pants, the 4.30 and Whipple V-10 beats my old 05 6.0 diesel, and my old 02 7.3 diesel hands down. I have owned all these trucks, and have enjoyed them all, but the diesel maintenance and living on an island with no diesel experts, and no highways turned me off the diesels...
Just my personal experience.
Garry
โJul-29-2014 09:37 AM
โJul-29-2014 12:23 AM
โJul-28-2014 09:03 PM
โJul-26-2014 06:43 AM
โJul-24-2014 06:00 AM
โJul-24-2014 12:25 AM
โJul-23-2014 07:03 PM
twodownzero wrote:
I would not buy a gas engine for hauling a heavy camper unless it's on flat ground.
Even when not towing, with a 3k lb camper on board, I'm happy to have the Cummins' power under the hood.
Having owned a Diesel engine for over 9 years, I cannot possibly imagine what it'd take to convince me to go back to gasoline unless the engine was 600+ cubic inches and gas was 25 cents a gallon.
It will work, but it will be slow and burn a LOT of fuel. And who goes on a short vacation?
I get 14-16 mpg with just the camper on. Towing the mileage is crappy. But if you got 10 with a gasser, that'd be a miracle, and that means 50% more fuel!
โJul-23-2014 05:35 PM
โJul-23-2014 01:23 PM
sky_free wrote:
OK, I know I shouldn't ask this, but why should you get a diesel to haul a truck camper?
โJul-23-2014 11:39 AM
CaveRun wrote:
Get a diesel if you're going to haul a truck camper, or pull a trailer.