One day I’m gonna look into finding out if these Roxor’s if they can be registered like golf carts are here in southern Jersey. If they can I want one. Great commuter ride. I miss my Samuri .
Next time you race one of those Colorado 2.8L Duramax make sure you have an out in case they blow the stock engine up.
Little education for those looking at another GM Bean Counter Diesel 2.8L baby Duramax. GM's other bean counter disaster the 6.2L diesel that replaced the Bean Counter 5.7L Olds hand grenade had a cast crank in it that was known to break. Detroit Diesel said use a forged crank in the 6.2L diesel. GM Bean Counters said watch us not care... GM added a 100K warranty on later diesels like the the punched out 6.2 known as a 6.5 with the same cheap cast crank to be able to sell them as their busted crank reputation haunted them. Regardless this 6.5 GM Bean Counter Diesel could loose an injector, melt a piston down, lock it up at TDC, the intact wrist pin could shatter the piston skirt, bend the rod, and beat 8 holes in the cylinder wall without breaking it's wrist pin.
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Now GM has figured out how to screw up Wrist Pins in diesel engines.The 2.8L has broken plenty of wrist pins. A plague of blown engines isn't "pretty good": it's AWFUL. And par for the GM Diesel Bean Counter Course. PDF attached of an analysis of just one failure.
GM hasn't learned one dammed thing about how to design and produce a reliable diesel engine. GM needs outside help to do so and even then they still snap crankshafts in the 6.6L Duramax. At least the Isuzu designed 6.6L could usually make it through the 100K warranty without failing the rotating mass.
GM produces cheap diesel engines that border on "You would be better off sucking down the single digit MPG gas with a gas engine."
And now GM wants you to buy a 3.0 I6 diesel with an over-complicated thermally limited cooling system and a belt driven oil pump. Typical inadequate GM cooling system... What could possibly go right?![]()
And, lest we forget, their fingerprints are all over the Eco diesel...
... It's on par with the Mercedes Diesel engine in their vans. Word is the Mercedes Diesel runs so hot it ruins it's engine oil - aka the oil change interval is 3x too long. This results in the cylinders wearing out and high oil consumption in 80,000 miles or less. At least it's not hot oily parts embedded in the pavement, but, still a low bar of reliability going the distance with a diesel engine.