Not sure about that Ron, the on ramp run we did in your truck with all four of us in the truck was pretty impressive.
We will have to give it a go!
Not sure about that Ron, the on ramp run we did in your truck with all four of us in the truck was pretty impressive.
It doesn't matter whether it is AT speed or getting TO speed, final drive ratio does not take into account the extra load imposed by the lower numerical ratios. It doesn't matter whether it is steady state or accelerating the effort required remains the same in each state and the diff ratio will effect that more than anything else. It will take more effort to roll a given load at a given speed with 3.42's than it will with 4.10's. All things being equal, that can be documented by engine load.
Higher ratios in the differential and high speed empty economy without losing towing capacity.
You don’t.Gee, I feel I already have that. SnoKing
You don’t.
Seriously, a truck with 4:10s will out tow a 3:42 any day of the week. Doesn’t mean you can’t, but when it comes to towing, the 4:10 is king right now. That’s been discussed several times as to why in this thread.
You don’t.
Seriously, a truck with 4:10s will out tow a 3:42 any day of the week. Doesn’t mean you can’t, but when it comes to towing, the 4:10 is king right now. That’s been discussed several times as to why in this thread.
Good to hear. I know it won't be an issue, but I know for sure I will notice and will miss how the truck drove on a stock platform, i.e. acceleration, rpms at speeds, and towing.My Sons SRW runs 35’s with AISIN no issues at 125k or so.
I get on the freeway once then drive at freeway speeds for hours then stop. How much of that time did I use anything other than 6th with my 4.10’s or with my 3.42’s 5th?
Takes 10 seconds longer to get on the freeway really matter?
Funny, 3.42's worked fine from 2013 models to 2018? Why are they now a problem.
The final drive ratios are virtually the same with 5th gear and 4:42s and 6th gear and 4:10s as mentioned many times here. The final drive ratio is what determines the overall load (that and the load itself). So if the final drive ratio is the same at speed how would the engine load be different?
I wonder, though, if that would be the case if the Aisin was offered in the 2500, even if behind the SO engine?
Because the final drive ratio is just a number that ignores the pertinent factors. Engine load is not dependent on final drive ratio it is dependent on the effort needed to transfer the power to the ground and "do the work". What every discussion so far refuses to acknowledge is the "do the work" factor, it cannot be ignored as it is integral to the discussion.
Simply cannot have it both ways and just "lose" energy, the physical world simply does not work that way. If you acknowledge the fact that a 4.10 geared truck will out accelerate a 3.42 geared truck under the SAME load you are by default acknowledging the former will need less engine load to maintain a set speed than the latter. It is all about time and distance, any gear ratios involved just modify or are used to modify the basic unit of work, time and distance.
There is a misconception that the OD ratios impart a mechanical advantage, it doesn't. It reduces the mechanical advantage. When you reduce the mechanical advantage and reduce the leverage how can the efficacy in any shape or form be better? Short answer is it can't, but if the SOP meter can't measure it doesn't know that so opinions are touted as fact.
There is a misconception that the OD ratios impart a mechanical advantage, it doesn't. It reduces the mechanical advantage. When you reduce the mechanical advantage and reduce the leverage how can the efficacy in any shape or form be better? Short answer is it can't, but if the SOP meter can't measure it doesn't know that so opinions are touted as fact.
Just to simplify things....is there anyone here that thinks a higher (numerically lower) gear ratio will move a heavy load better than a low gear ratio? Forget about compromises to suit anyone's specific needs, unloaded mileage etc etc, but anyone NOT agree with the mechanical advantage that lower gears provide?
What about how lower gears ease the load on all drivetrain components ahead of those gears? Anyone disagree with that?
I agree that the engine doesn't know, feel, or care where the gear reduction comes from in a 5th gear 3.42 vs. 6th gear 4.10's scenario, but the transmission and driveline do in regards to the load it sees. With 5th gear and 3.42's all of the components of the trans after the gear reduction (any clutches, shafts, gears) and the driveline/u-joints are all seeing more load than 6th gear with 4.10's. Not that it can handle this, but it is slightly more wear.
We already discussed the sacrifices of losing 6th gear while towing and not have as low of a 1st gear.
The point I want to make is that if you want to move a heavy load, and moving that load well is the top priority:
3.42 Good
3.73 Better
4.10 Best
In each of the 6 gears, you will have more torque, more mechanical advantage available with a lower R&P ratio vs a higher one and that advantage comes from the increased leverage of the gears themselves.
If I went from my 3.42's to 3.73's, each of my transmission gears would be more useful while towing. 6th would have more torque than now, 5th would have more torque etc. etc. This means 6th would be more usable, 5th would be more usable and so on down the line.
Yet, the 2013-2018 SRW Aisin trucks do just fine up to their rate capacity with 3.42 gears.
Continuing to beating a dead horse does not make it more dead!
If a lower gear diff increasing the ability to do work, the same applies to a lower transmission gear ratio.
So you’re saying 2.58 isn’t pretty darn close to 2:63? One truck would be spinning the driveshaft faster than the other, that’s it. The load isn’t driveshaft speed, it’s the overall resistance to being moved down the road.
Please explain to me how the final drive ratio has no effect to engine load, but differential ratio does?
Tire size (overall diameter) effects final drive ratio and the overall engine load. But tire size doesn’t effect differential ratio. According to your statement, I could put whatever tire I wanted on anything and it would have zero effect on the truck. We all know that’s not true.
Doing "fine" and what is optimum are two different things. I think I qualified my statements about ultimate goals.
Is it only everyone else that is beating a dead horse, and not you?