It appears that with routine maintenance, gasoline powered pickups can rival diesels in the mileage department.
A crane mechanic at work here has a dark green mid-80's Chevy K-30 SRW cab chassis with a 9' utility bed on it. Its overloaded with welders, compressors, autocrane, tool chests etc and has been since new.
He does alot of driving for work getting to and from various jobsites to work on equipment, do crane lifts, etc. His secret to success is simple routine and timely maintenance. When he reaches 1 million miles he will find another truck. He is seriously considering a Ford F-350 SRW with a 6BT conversion and a built up automatic transmission.
His K-30 truck currently has over 750,000 miles and is only on its second 4-bolt splayed-main 350 small block. The first made it to 485,000 miles until the cam lobes simply wore off and the truck couldn't breath. Anticipating this he simply installed a new 350 he had built up the year prior. The secret he said is to only use high magnesium content GM blocks which wear extremely well. On his original engine, he never pulled the valve covers once. Just oil at 3000, coolant at 20,000, plugs, filters etc until the cam wore out. At the end he said it started to consume just a small amount of oil during use.
I'm not comparing the amount of work in terms of load or pulling this truck can do in comparison to a Cummins or Powerstroke. I'm just making comment about miles obtained by a one ton gas truck thats loaded and worked more than many diesels out there.
Further proof that one million miles SHOULD be expected from heavier duty diesel pickups and considered the norm and not the exception. Care and maintanence is critical to any engine if you are to achieve this.
In all respect, that is a lot of verified miles for any vehicle.
A crane mechanic at work here has a dark green mid-80's Chevy K-30 SRW cab chassis with a 9' utility bed on it. Its overloaded with welders, compressors, autocrane, tool chests etc and has been since new.
He does alot of driving for work getting to and from various jobsites to work on equipment, do crane lifts, etc. His secret to success is simple routine and timely maintenance. When he reaches 1 million miles he will find another truck. He is seriously considering a Ford F-350 SRW with a 6BT conversion and a built up automatic transmission.
His K-30 truck currently has over 750,000 miles and is only on its second 4-bolt splayed-main 350 small block. The first made it to 485,000 miles until the cam lobes simply wore off and the truck couldn't breath. Anticipating this he simply installed a new 350 he had built up the year prior. The secret he said is to only use high magnesium content GM blocks which wear extremely well. On his original engine, he never pulled the valve covers once. Just oil at 3000, coolant at 20,000, plugs, filters etc until the cam wore out. At the end he said it started to consume just a small amount of oil during use.
I'm not comparing the amount of work in terms of load or pulling this truck can do in comparison to a Cummins or Powerstroke. I'm just making comment about miles obtained by a one ton gas truck thats loaded and worked more than many diesels out there.
Further proof that one million miles SHOULD be expected from heavier duty diesel pickups and considered the norm and not the exception. Care and maintanence is critical to any engine if you are to achieve this.
In all respect, that is a lot of verified miles for any vehicle.
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