โDec-06-2018 01:38 PM
โDec-10-2018 06:48 AM
โDec-10-2018 05:08 AM
โDec-09-2018 02:42 PM
parker.rowe wrote:RCMAN46 wrote:
The 4.10 gearing will not give you more horsepower.
Gearing will not change the horsepower of a vehicle period.
Only modifications to the engine can increase horsepower.
Not sure why this keeps getting repeated.
We know gear ratios don't change what the engine puts out.
They multiply (or reduce in the case of overdrive gears) when get's sent to the tires to drive the truck forward.
If they didn't matter, all vehicles would have 1 speed transmissions and 1:1 rear end ratios.
โDec-09-2018 08:22 AM
2Rad4U wrote:
4 pages on a pot that was answered in the first two replies. Then the pissing match started...
LOL
โDec-08-2018 05:09 PM
parker.rowe wrote:RCMAN46 wrote:
The 4.10 gearing will not give you more horsepower.
Gearing will not change the horsepower of a vehicle period.
Only modifications to the engine can increase horsepower.
Not sure why this keeps getting repeated.
We know gear ratios don't change what the engine puts out.
They multiply (or reduce in the case of overdrive gears) when get's sent to the tires to drive the truck forward.
If they didn't matter, all vehicles would have 1 speed transmissions and 1:1 rear end ratios.
โDec-08-2018 02:30 PM
2Rad4U wrote:
4 pages on a pot that was answered in the first two replies. Then the pissing match started...
LOL
โDec-08-2018 12:10 PM
โDec-08-2018 11:54 AM
RCMAN46 wrote:
The 4.10 gearing will not give you more horsepower.
Gearing will not change the horsepower of a vehicle period.
Only modifications to the engine can increase horsepower.
โDec-08-2018 11:34 AM
HP = torque x RPM / 5252
RCMAN46 wrote:
The 4.10 gearing will not give you more horsepower.
Gearing will not change the horsepower of a vehicle period.
Only modifications to the engine can increase horsepower.
โDec-08-2018 07:15 AM
ib516 wrote:Beentherefixedthat wrote:
Further the 4:10 will make what is not great gas mileage much worse.
This is NOT the case.
Here is a quote from a GM powertrain engineer:
"How much of a difference does the choice of axle make? A 2013 Sierra 2500HD with a 6.0L V-8 and four-wheel drive can tow a maximum of 9,900 pounds with a 3.73:1 ratio or 14,400 pounds with a 4.10:1 ratio. Martuch estimates the fuel economy difference at highway speeds would be around 0.2-0.3 mpg between those two ratios, though reduced engine noise is also a benefit of maintaining lower engine speeds with the more-efficient ratio.
LINK
"According to Roger Clark, senior manager of GM's Energy Integration and Fuel Economy Learning Vehicles Program, which handles fuel-economy development of all GM trucks and SUVs, fuel economy may not change much by going to an optional axle ratio. "The typical combined-fuel-economy impact, based on lab test conditions, is a difference of about 0.4 mpg to 0.6 mpg between the standard gear ratio (3.42 or 3.55) and the lowest (4.10) offered. That change is linear, too. Choosing 3.73 or 3.92 gear ratios would have even less of an effect on fuel economy." Clark says that in the real world, choosing a lower gear ratio may not even show up in fuel economy associated with city driving. It's the steady-state, long-distance freeway romps where lower axle ratios have the most effect."
It's about 0.5 mpg or so between a 3.42/3.55 and a 3.92/4.10. Not much.
โDec-08-2018 06:51 AM
โDec-07-2018 07:47 PM
Beentherefixedthat wrote:
Further the 4:10 will make what is not great gas mileage much worse.
โDec-07-2018 07:37 PM
RCMAN46 wrote:
The 4.10 gearing will not give you more horsepower.
Gearing will not change the horsepower of a vehicle period.
Only modifications to the engine can increase horsepower.
โDec-07-2018 05:00 PM