What year Furd is that
pics snagged from here:
2011 Ford vs. Ram vs. GM Diesel Truck Shootout - Diesel Power Magazine
(no bias towards site, google just found the images for me)
-j
What year Furd is that
pics snagged from here:
2011 Ford vs. Ram vs. GM Diesel Truck Shootout - Diesel Power Magazine
(no bias towards site, google just found the images for me)
-j
The operating characteristics of an engine are determined by the configuration.
The primary operating characteristic of an inline six cylinder, gas or diesel, is smooth nearly perfectly vibration free operation and low rpm torque that is available at idle and just above idle speed, lower rpm operation, and greater fuel economy. The con side of that design is slightly slower engine acceleration due to the long stroke and larger, heavier pistons and lower peak rpm. All modern OTR tractor engines are inline six cylinder configuration.
A diesel inline six cylinder uses a much heavier engine block casting and is heavier overall than a V8 of similar displacement and requires a longer engine compartment and stronger suspension to support the engine. The awesome off idle and low rpm torque requires stronger transmissions and driveline components.
A V8 engine uses shorter strokes and eight smaller and lighter pistons. It has good natural balance, gains rpm rapidly, and has high peak rpm capablity. It does not produce much torque at idle speed or low rpm.
For use in a working truck size and weight are not much of an issue. The advantages of a big, powerful inline six are the things that matter.
In a pickup truck or other light truck application V8 diesels are cheaper to build (or purchase) and easier to fit into a shorter engine compartment. Also easier to design front end slope other aerodynamic considerations.
For light truck use with automatic transmissions many owners don't know the difference between an inline six and a V8 diesel.
There are huge differences in low rpm operation, service life, ease of maintenance and repair, and cost of repairs when necessary.
One of the reasons that V8 diesels are considered superior by many, as AH64 said, is because most of us grew up with overhead valve V8 gasoline engines in cars and light pickups. For acceleration and ease of making performance modifications, nothing else could compare in the American car market. Small block and big block Chevrolets, Furds, and MOPARS beginning in the middle '50s could be purchased and modified cheaply and easily and were capable of incredible performance.
I confess to being that ignorant through the late '80s and early '90s. I had owned and used 3/4 ton pickups to haul truck campers and, later, tow trailers since the late '60s. They delivered terrible fuel economy and short service lives but they got the job done. I was dumb enough to think, "why would anyone want one of those dinky little Cummins six cylinders?"
I did some reading and began to understand that it was low rpm torque that mattered for towing or hauling. High rpm horsepower was useless except to accelerate when unloaded, waste fuel, and wear out early.
I also had no use for the slushbox 12 valve early Gen II Rams. I test drove one and reject ed it in favor of a big block Furd in '94.
But I told myself in the late '90s that if and when Dodge ever offered a Cummins diesel with a manual six speed I would buy one. In '01 I went to my local Dodge dealer and asked to test drive a new HO/six speed. When I felt the incredible torque push me back in the seat at 1000 rpm in second gear with no throttle I was amazed. I was instantly hooked.
I would not drive a free Furd or GM with V8 diesel (or gas). There is no comparison to anyone who understands the differences and capabilities of the Cummins inline six cylinder diesel. I have also learned to appreciate and respect the Dodge Ram platform. Mine have been essentially troublefree.