โMar-03-2014 10:23 AM
โMar-04-2014 01:36 PM
CKNSLS wrote:2BLAZERS wrote:sleepy wrote:
If the price at the pump is exactlly the same between gasoline and diesel...
diesel is still much cheaper.
Because diesel gets so many more mpg
On my best day my old 3/4 ton gasoline fueled truck got 9.9 mpg
With my Lance 1161 fully loaded I actually have almost 70,000 miles averaging 15.1 mpg using diesel (my trucks computer read out and verified)
If both fuels are $4.00/gallon
My old gasoline engine would require 505.05 gallons to go 5000 mile which would cost $2020.20
My diesel engine would require 331.12 gallons to go 5000 miles which would cost $1324.50
That is a $695.69 savings over 5000 milesat $4.00/gallon
That is $24,349.38 saved in fuel over a gasoline engine for the 70,000 miles that I have had my Duramax if both gasoline and diesel are both priced at exactly $4.00/gallon.
It appears to me that the extra cost of the diesel engine has been well worth it...
Your math is wrong. $695.69 in savings per 5000 miles. 70,000/5000 = 14. $695.69*14 = $ 9,739.66 in savings in 70k miles. So you've now offset the cost of the diesel upgrade with diesel = gas in costs per gallon.
To bad diesel has basically been costing at 50 cents a gallon more than gas for almost 10 years now.
The cost of the maintenance will easily eat at least 50% (or more) of the amount "saved". We have to assume the maintenance will be done at a commercial garage or dealership since MOST PEOPLE will have it performed that way. Yes, you have maintenance on a gas motor as well-it's not anywhere near as costly.
โMar-04-2014 01:33 PM
โMar-04-2014 12:55 PM
2BLAZERS wrote:sleepy wrote:
If the price at the pump is exactlly the same between gasoline and diesel...
diesel is still much cheaper.
Because diesel gets so many more mpg
On my best day my old 3/4 ton gasoline fueled truck got 9.9 mpg
With my Lance 1161 fully loaded I actually have almost 70,000 miles averaging 15.1 mpg using diesel (my trucks computer read out and verified)
If both fuels are $4.00/gallon
My old gasoline engine would require 505.05 gallons to go 5000 mile which would cost $2020.20
My diesel engine would require 331.12 gallons to go 5000 miles which would cost $1324.50
That is a $695.69 savings over 5000 milesat $4.00/gallon
That is 9,739.66 saved in fuel over a gasoline engine for the 70,000 miles that I have had my Duramax if both gasoline and diesel are both priced at exactly $4.00/gallon.
It appears to me that the extra cost of the diesel engine has been well worth it...
Your math is wrong. $695.69 in savings per 5000 miles. 70,000/5000 = 14. $695.69*14 = $ 9,739.66 in savings in 70k miles. So you've now offset the cost of the diesel upgrade with diesel = gas in costs per gallon.
Too bad diesel has basically been costing at 50 cents a gallon more than gas for almost 10 years now.
โMar-04-2014 12:55 PM
2BLAZERS wrote:sleepy wrote:
If the price at the pump is exactlly the same between gasoline and diesel...
diesel is still much cheaper.
Because diesel gets so many more mpg
On my best day my old 3/4 ton gasoline fueled truck got 9.9 mpg
With my Lance 1161 fully loaded I actually have almost 70,000 miles averaging 15.1 mpg using diesel (my trucks computer read out and verified)
If both fuels are $4.00/gallon
My old gasoline engine would require 505.05 gallons to go 5000 mile which would cost $2020.20
My diesel engine would require 331.12 gallons to go 5000 miles which would cost $1324.50
That is a $695.69 savings over 5000 milesat $4.00/gallon
That is $24,349.38 saved in fuel over a gasoline engine for the 70,000 miles that I have had my Duramax if both gasoline and diesel are both priced at exactly $4.00/gallon.
It appears to me that the extra cost of the diesel engine has been well worth it...
Your math is wrong. $695.69 in savings per 5000 miles. 70,000/5000 = 14. $695.69*14 = $ 9,739.66 in savings in 70k miles. So you've now offset the cost of the diesel upgrade with diesel = gas in costs per gallon.
To bad diesel has basically been costing at 50 cents a gallon more than gas for almost 10 years now.
โMar-04-2014 12:47 PM
โMar-04-2014 12:20 PM
sleepy wrote:
If the price at the pump is exactlly the same between gasoline and diesel...
diesel is still much cheaper.
Because diesel gets so many more mpg
On my best day my old 3/4 ton gasoline fueled truck got 9.9 mpg
With my Lance 1161 fully loaded I actually have almost 70,000 miles averaging 15.1 mpg using diesel (my trucks computer read out and verified)
If both fuels are $4.00/gallon
My old gasoline engine would require 505.05 gallons to go 5000 mile which would cost $2020.20
My diesel engine would require 331.12 gallons to go 5000 miles which would cost $1324.50
That is a $695.69 savings over 5000 milesat $4.00/gallon
That is $24,349.38 saved in fuel over a gasoline engine for the 70,000 miles that I have had my Duramax if both gasoline and diesel are both priced at exactly $4.00/gallon.
It appears to me that the extra cost of the diesel engine has been well worth it...
โMar-04-2014 11:04 AM
โMar-04-2014 10:17 AM
okan-star wrote:
The cost is , more diesels in the USA , better or worse ?
A few years ago when imports started using more diesel motors I heard it would bring down the cost of diesel . I havent seen that
Now CA has "smog tests" for diesel, and we lost most of the cetane in our diesel
โMar-04-2014 10:05 AM
โMar-04-2014 10:01 AM
sleepy wrote:
Will they ever haul a self contained truck camper?
I see an awful lot of empty 1/2 ton trucks on the road... most don't look like anything has ever scratched the paint in their beds.
There are a lot of them in my neighborhood that aren't used for work... jacked up, oversize or expensive pretty wheels, fancy flaps (mud flaps that is) special exhausts to make them loud, chips, etc.
Their owners had a piece of cardboard hitting the spokes of their bicycle wheels when they were children... and tassels on their handle bars...
As adults some of these people have laser lights and LEDs on their bicycles and wear special racing cloths to ride around the neighborhoods.... extended childhood
Wanta bees...
in my opinion...
A large portion of the little diesel trucks that the OP mentiond will end up as pimped up and nearly usless except for groceries or hauling a couple of gallons of gasoline for the lawnmower
Where they will excell is driving round and round the Sonic Dirive In.... and rumbling through the neigborhood empty.
And at what cost?
โMar-04-2014 09:43 AM
Raften wrote:CKNSLS wrote:Raften wrote:
I don't think payload is what they are aiming for.
OK- I get it. The market are for those who want a diesel for a grocery getter.
That makes as much sense as selling ice cubes at the North Pole!
I don't think you do get it. Might depend on where you live but around here the area is full of half tons hauling construction and service stuff. SO, I talked to the head guy doing some remodeling on the house. He said he drives as much as 200 miles a day checking on his crews and taking tools and supplies back and forth. He said he would welcome a diesel for the reasons I have stated above. He also mentioned the torque advantage getting on a freeway pulling say a cement pumper or heavy load of drywall.
โMar-04-2014 09:22 AM
โMar-04-2014 09:11 AM
805gregg wrote:
They are 25 years late to the diesel party
โMar-04-2014 08:48 AM
CKNSLS wrote:Raften wrote:
I don't think payload is what they are aiming for.
OK- I get it. The market are for those who want a diesel for a grocery getter.
That makes as much sense as selling ice cubes at the North Pole!
โMar-04-2014 05:05 AM
dadwolf2 wrote:JumboJet wrote:Actually it's not a 3.2L Cummins, it's an Italian firm VM Motori engine.
Nissan Titan and Toyota Tundra each getting the 5.0 L Cummins. Either of those will make nice tow vehicles for small to midsize travel trailers and 5th wheels.
Too bad the RAM 1500 is only getting the 3.2 Liter Cummins.