Apr-12-2023 04:35 PM
Apr-14-2023 07:18 PM
noonenosthis1 wrote:
Well, I've been looking at those 7.3's. Holy ****! They are some nice looking trucks tho. I wonder if it would be possible to put that engine in my truck. My Pop put a 327 into his 1955 Willys Wagon but I do not remember what transmission he had.
Apr-14-2023 12:24 PM
Crespro wrote:
Hi,
I had a 400ISL on my prior RV, so understand and appreciate diesel engines. We have a 7.3 with 10 speed and 4.30 and it is fine for our 15K fifth wheel. About 10K miles, mostly in California. The tradeoff is 3,500 to 4,000 rpm on hills (perhaps 2% or 3% of towing) versus better operation and ride when not towing (about 45% of miles for us.) I understand why some like diesel engines, but for 15K or less, this is a solid option.
Best,
Charles
Apr-14-2023 12:09 PM
noonenosthis1 wrote:
Well, I've been looking at those 7.3's. Holy ****! They are some nice looking trucks tho. I wonder if it would be possible to put that engine in my truck. My Pop put a 327 into his 1955 Willys Wagon but I do not remember what transmission he had.
Apr-14-2023 11:47 AM
Apr-14-2023 11:38 AM
Apr-14-2023 10:49 AM
Apr-14-2023 10:45 AM
MFL wrote:
My Ford 6.2 gas does not need to scream, to pull my FW up a 7-10 percent grade. I've never needed more than 4K rpm, even double towing, up a 7% 3.5 mile climb, which includes lots of curves, and speeds of 35-55 mph. At 3-4K rpm, it is very smooth and quiet IMO anyway.
Maybe I'm more used to real screaming rpm, from years of riding crotch rockets? My current Yamaha FZ1 redlines at 11,500 rpm, and while it does have an exciting scream, it is very smooth running. First gear at redline about 90 mph. It has 5 more gears to go! Due to factory exhaust valve tuning, it will handle 40 mph in 6th gear nicely. Top speed 170+
The Ford 7.3 makes good HP and TQ, at lower rpm than the 6.2, and many other gas engines as well.
Jerry
Apr-14-2023 07:18 AM
JRscooby wrote:ksss wrote:
That screaming of the engine is what gas engines need to do to make their power. All of them do it. Nothing is coming through the hood, diesels make their power at a much lower RPM. Some people can't stand that high RPM. Your options are deal with the high RPM or get a diesel.
If I had some way to prove it I would bet most people driving diesel spend more time above 90% of redline than gas engine drivers do.Lantley wrote:
A screaming (hi Revving) engine. Does not produce a relaxing drive.
Don't get me wrong I understand that how the gas engine makes its power.
I still don't want to listen to it scream for the entire drive.
In time the noise wears me out....LOL
How much more sound absorbing is put around the diesel?spoon059 wrote:Lantley wrote:
Plus you get the benefit of the exhaust brake with diesel
Honestly, its the exhaust brake and low rpms of the diesel that keep me inclined to buy another diesel when I upgrade this truck in a couple years.
I have a kinda different look at this idea.
Has anybody seen a side by each comparison; Same gears, engine size load, exhaust brake on diesel and spark fired with closed throttle holding back on a down-grade?
Then think about this part. Something not involved in normal engine control must happen for the exhaust brake to began to slow vehicle. A bad electrical connection, no engine ******. OTOH, the gas engine, closed throttle is the default, engine braking will work even if engine will not run.
Apr-14-2023 06:55 AM
JRscooby wrote:ksss wrote:
That screaming of the engine is what gas engines need to do to make their power. All of them do it. Nothing is coming through the hood, diesels make their power at a much lower RPM. Some people can't stand that high RPM. Your options are deal with the high RPM or get a diesel.
If I had some way to prove it I would bet most people driving diesel spend more time above 90% of redline than gas engine drivers do.
Apr-14-2023 05:33 AM
Apr-14-2023 05:17 AM
valhalla360 wrote:Lantley wrote:
A screaming (hi Revving) engine. Does not produce a relaxing drive.
Don't get me wrong I understand that how the gas engine makes its power.
I still don't want to listen to it scream for the entire drive.
In time the noise wears me out....LOL
Unless you are strictly driving in mountains, not a big deal. Most of the time our old V10 cruises a little over 2000 rpm. Can't hear it over wind and tire noise.
While you need to build some rpm, you don't need to red line it. Rarely take it over 3500rpm and have no problem keeping up with the semis. With the new more powerful engines mated to the 10 speed, it should be even better.
Of course this presumes you aren't trying to pull 16k or something silly. North of 14k 15k the extra power of the diesel starts making sense but that isn't what the OP described.
Apr-14-2023 04:10 AM
ksss wrote:
That screaming of the engine is what gas engines need to do to make their power. All of them do it. Nothing is coming through the hood, diesels make their power at a much lower RPM. Some people can't stand that high RPM. Your options are deal with the high RPM or get a diesel.
Lantley wrote:
A screaming (hi Revving) engine. Does not produce a relaxing drive.
Don't get me wrong I understand that how the gas engine makes its power.
I still don't want to listen to it scream for the entire drive.
In time the noise wears me out....LOL
spoon059 wrote:Lantley wrote:
Plus you get the benefit of the exhaust brake with diesel
Honestly, its the exhaust brake and low rpms of the diesel that keep me inclined to buy another diesel when I upgrade this truck in a couple years.
Apr-13-2023 09:50 PM
Lantley wrote:
A screaming (hi Revving) engine. Does not produce a relaxing drive.
Don't get me wrong I understand that how the gas engine makes its power.
I still don't want to listen to it scream for the entire drive.
In time the noise wears me out....LOL
Apr-13-2023 07:33 PM
JRscooby wrote:
Go up a 10 mile long grade at 60 MPH, takes you 10 minutes. Up the same grade at 30, takes 20 minutes. Now how much of your drive is steep enough to pull you down to 30? And the diesel will drop some speed too.
Bet if you really ran the numbers, in the course of a day you might save half hour, unless you are speeding in the diesel. Of course that does not account for the assault on manhood of somebody passing you.
Apr-13-2023 05:16 PM
Lantley wrote:
Plus you get the benefit of the exhaust brake with diesel