Originally posted by Radshooter
Hi Kurt... . I can't give you a scientific answer, but can relate what I have observed on my truck. I have to agree with Parshal. When we pulled our 16k fiver down to Yuma from Idaho, I had several ocassions to drop out of fifth gear down to fourth. I like to keep my RPMs around 2100 when towing. When I dropped to 4th, I didn't notice much change in EGTs just due to the gear change. What I did notice was I could run the EGTs right up to the red mark or drop them down to around 1100 just by how much throttle I applied. I learned to "feather" the throttle as I went up the hills to keep EGTs in a safe range, but still on the hot side. I could push them right up to 1250 and keep them there for a while, then back off just enough to cool down to 1150 or 1200 for a while. By then, I would be catching up to the Ferds and Chebbys pulling smaller trailers than mine and still be able to pass them while keeping the EGTs below 1300! In a nutshell, my personal experience says amount of throttle has more input than what gear you are running.
Hope this helps.
Steve