Mar-19-2014 03:09 PM
Apr-05-2014 05:36 PM
Mar-29-2014 09:11 AM
ah64id wrote:spoon059 wrote:
Some people don't like to let a gas engine rev, that is their prerogative, that doesn't mean that there is anything wrong with truck.
Agree, I didn't say it was wrong just that they would scream 🙂
Mar-29-2014 04:30 AM
Mar-28-2014 07:01 PM
Mar-23-2014 12:02 PM
music69 wrote:
If shifting to higher rpm and/or slowing down on a grade is a problem when towing, then forced induction, diesel and big blocks are the only options. All n/a gas motors are going to shift (or slow) on grades when pushed. The DOHC motors that Toyota uses are more prone to this than, say, a GM push rod, since the torque curve is pretty steep up to ~3k+ rpm, but that's how they're intended to work. They rev so quietly, that I don't see where anyone would mind? Not much louder than a turbo spooling, to me, and pretty much always quieter than a Cummins 🙂
Mar-23-2014 09:39 AM
Mar-22-2014 09:19 AM
spoon059 wrote:
Some people don't like to let a gas engine rev, that is their prerogative, that doesn't mean that there is anything wrong with truck.
Mar-22-2014 09:10 AM
ah64id wrote:
Small, and I do mean small like a 2% rise for 1/2 mile, would send both rigs screaming. One guy was so annoyed he slowed to 55 in a flat stretch of a 75 mph zone to quit listening to the motor.
The other guy towed with it for a summer and now has a diesel, and said the tundra doesn't even hold a candle to the way a HD pickup tows it.
They both said the tundra has the power, just needs way too many rpms to make it.
Maybe it's the elevation out here? But 2 rigs with nearly identical trailers is not a fluke.
Mar-22-2014 08:59 AM
camp-n-family wrote:Make sure he knows it would sound like a sewing machine on any and every grade if he wants to hold any speed.
I have two friends that had 18CK trailers (5,200lbs max) and got very tired of their 2007 and 2008 Tundra's down shifting on the slightest of grades. The trucks held speed just fine, but ran a LOT of rpms to do so.
I am sure this is how many gas rigs are, but no real experience with the others.
I find that hard to believe. They must be driving in OD if it was shifting a lot or had aftermarket exhausts if it was loud. I leave mine in 5th and it hums all day at 65mph in the low 2000rpm range with my 31' 7600lbs tt. If I hold speeds on some long grades it will downshift like any other vehicle, but it hardly sounds like a sewing machine. It's no low rpm diesel but it's also not loud or annoying at all.
Mar-22-2014 08:13 AM
camp-n-family wrote:Make sure he knows it would sound like a sewing machine on any and every grade if he wants to hold any speed.
I have two friends that had 18CK trailers (5,200lbs max) and got very tired of their 2007 and 2008 Tundra's down shifting on the slightest of grades. The trucks held speed just fine, but ran a LOT of rpms to do so.
I am sure this is how many gas rigs are, but no real experience with the others.
I find that hard to believe. They must be driving in OD if it was shifting a lot or had aftermarket exhausts if it was loud. I leave mine in 5th and it hums all day at 65mph in the low 2000rpm range with my 31' 7600lbs tt. If I hold speeds on some long grades it will downshift like any other vehicle, but it hardly sounds like a sewing machine. It's no low rpm diesel but it's also not loud or annoying at all.
Mar-22-2014 08:00 AM
camp-n-family wrote:Make sure he knows it would sound like a sewing machine on any and every grade if he wants to hold any speed.
I have two friends that had 18CK trailers (5,200lbs max) and got very tired of their 2007 and 2008 Tundra's down shifting on the slightest of grades. The trucks held speed just fine, but ran a LOT of rpms to do so.
I am sure this is how many gas rigs are, but no real experience with the others.
I find that hard to believe. They must be driving in OD if it was shifting a lot or had aftermarket exhausts if it was loud. I leave mine in 5th and it hums all day at 65mph in the low 2000rpm range with my 31' 7600lbs tt. If I hold speeds on some long grades it will downshift like any other vehicle, but it hardly sounds like a sewing machine. It's no low rpm diesel but it's also not loud or annoying at all.
Mar-21-2014 07:19 PM
Make sure he knows it would sound like a sewing machine on any and every grade if he wants to hold any speed.
I have two friends that had 18CK trailers (5,200lbs max) and got very tired of their 2007 and 2008 Tundra's down shifting on the slightest of grades. The trucks held speed just fine, but ran a LOT of rpms to do so.
I am sure this is how many gas rigs are, but no real experience with the others.
Mar-21-2014 04:57 PM
Mar-21-2014 04:20 PM