Tuesdak
TDR MEMBER
Diesel and Manual transmissions are also more popular elsewhere. So are mopeds. A HD (pickup) class vehicle delivers mopeds and electric golf carts in the middle of the night: not the other way around.
One HD vehicle has already suffered this Small Displacement fate: Vans. Long time ago Vans had anemic "Can't get out of their own way" 6.2/6.5TD Diesel engines with 200 HP or less engines in them. P30 potato chip delivery vehicles with ~100 HP NA diesels. What an unpleasant get out and walk faster passed by a bicycle drive.
For a time you could get a 2500 van with a de-tuned Duramax and so-so 4L80E transmission shoved behind it.
Today GM has a 4 banger turbo in a 2500 Van that makes less power and TQ than the forgotten IDI 6.5TD did. Standard the 4.3L V6 gas engine and for a saving grace a optional non-AFM 6.0L V8. They no longer make 1500 (1/2 ton) vans. Yes, the same wrist pin busting 4 banger they put in the Colorado 'smaller' pickups they shove in a 3/4 ton van.
For 1/2 tons...
The rest of the world does NOT have our wealth, strict emissions laws, regulations for crashes, cheap fuel, CAFE, customer desire for a comfortable vehicle, DISTANCES of large open roads: some of our States are larger than said countries.
It takes a Wal-Mart parking lot here to resemble driving in Vietnam.
If our Laws and Government interference were "different" Full Size (1970's size) Station Wagons would still rule the road instead of Crew Cab Pickups with needed legroom for FOUR or More ADULTS. Aka ADULTS in the back seat not kids under 12.
After uncomfortable seating for 6 people you need a SUV with a 3rd row or a passenger van. Some families here need 15 passenger vans to get around. Used to be they were all shoved in a Station Wagon before seatbelts were a thing.
We generally lack public transportation, short distances between buildings of overcrowded non-stop metro areas...
Extra expense for plates/insurance/parking for more than one "does it all" vehicle is a concern for "US" not Government.
Emissions requirements trump: Driveability, reliability, and MPG. Last I checked CAFE doesn't apply to towing so that "compromise" of a big block low RPM gasoline engine including a Big I6 doing better when loaded like HD use of towing is no longer a consideration. Large Displacement heavy engines are a weight penalty vs. small displacement turbo when testing the unloaded configuration for CAFE and/or emissions.
So yeah they likely tested it or are we their R&D? Clearly the compromises made are due to laws not a preference to offer a gasoline engine that gets the best MPG "loaded" in a HD platform. CAFE and/or Emissions credits win and why not use one engine production line in everything you can?
The Disaster of the "Early Emissions" 2007-2013 Non-DEF Cummins Pickups be "Where is My MPG?!" and "Choke to death on soot for NOx control: Reliability?" ... well tested and ready for production sarcasm I will throw back at you. Point of fact I was better off driving a 2008 Chevy Duramax vs. the 'emissions requirements met early' Dodge RAM we looked at in 2008 hindsight being 20-20. Just one example of many powertrain disasters turned loose on the public with one exception that makes this example notable: the MPG reduction suffered to meet the NOx laws without DEF. (Or cheating like VW demonstrated with better MPG by ignoring NOx laws...) In one way this was Government EPA backing OEM's into a corner by not allowing the use of DEF for their "line in the sand NOx rules".
Do we owe Dodge/Cummins/RAM our respect for the DEF use being allowed by the EPA now due to them proving it was impossible to relibily meet the ~2013 emissions without DEF?
One HD vehicle has already suffered this Small Displacement fate: Vans. Long time ago Vans had anemic "Can't get out of their own way" 6.2/6.5TD Diesel engines with 200 HP or less engines in them. P30 potato chip delivery vehicles with ~100 HP NA diesels. What an unpleasant get out and walk faster passed by a bicycle drive.
For a time you could get a 2500 van with a de-tuned Duramax and so-so 4L80E transmission shoved behind it.
Today GM has a 4 banger turbo in a 2500 Van that makes less power and TQ than the forgotten IDI 6.5TD did. Standard the 4.3L V6 gas engine and for a saving grace a optional non-AFM 6.0L V8. They no longer make 1500 (1/2 ton) vans. Yes, the same wrist pin busting 4 banger they put in the Colorado 'smaller' pickups they shove in a 3/4 ton van.
For 1/2 tons...
The rest of the world does NOT have our wealth, strict emissions laws, regulations for crashes, cheap fuel, CAFE, customer desire for a comfortable vehicle, DISTANCES of large open roads: some of our States are larger than said countries.
It takes a Wal-Mart parking lot here to resemble driving in Vietnam.
If our Laws and Government interference were "different" Full Size (1970's size) Station Wagons would still rule the road instead of Crew Cab Pickups with needed legroom for FOUR or More ADULTS. Aka ADULTS in the back seat not kids under 12.
After uncomfortable seating for 6 people you need a SUV with a 3rd row or a passenger van. Some families here need 15 passenger vans to get around. Used to be they were all shoved in a Station Wagon before seatbelts were a thing.
We generally lack public transportation, short distances between buildings of overcrowded non-stop metro areas...
Extra expense for plates/insurance/parking for more than one "does it all" vehicle is a concern for "US" not Government.
Ya im sure Ram did no market testing, will go bankrupt from this and then we will all be driving Fords and Chevys.............
Emissions requirements trump: Driveability, reliability, and MPG. Last I checked CAFE doesn't apply to towing so that "compromise" of a big block low RPM gasoline engine including a Big I6 doing better when loaded like HD use of towing is no longer a consideration. Large Displacement heavy engines are a weight penalty vs. small displacement turbo when testing the unloaded configuration for CAFE and/or emissions.
So yeah they likely tested it or are we their R&D? Clearly the compromises made are due to laws not a preference to offer a gasoline engine that gets the best MPG "loaded" in a HD platform. CAFE and/or Emissions credits win and why not use one engine production line in everything you can?
The Disaster of the "Early Emissions" 2007-2013 Non-DEF Cummins Pickups be "Where is My MPG?!" and "Choke to death on soot for NOx control: Reliability?" ... well tested and ready for production sarcasm I will throw back at you. Point of fact I was better off driving a 2008 Chevy Duramax vs. the 'emissions requirements met early' Dodge RAM we looked at in 2008 hindsight being 20-20. Just one example of many powertrain disasters turned loose on the public with one exception that makes this example notable: the MPG reduction suffered to meet the NOx laws without DEF. (Or cheating like VW demonstrated with better MPG by ignoring NOx laws...) In one way this was Government EPA backing OEM's into a corner by not allowing the use of DEF for their "line in the sand NOx rules".
Do we owe Dodge/Cummins/RAM our respect for the DEF use being allowed by the EPA now due to them proving it was impossible to relibily meet the ~2013 emissions without DEF?