Originally posted by Doubleclutch
Just a thought about the price issue- The GM guys have been waiting for a good diesel for a very long time.
Well, the 6. 2L and 6. 5L were both good diesels - they didn't have the power of the CTD, PSD, or Duramax, but they were never advertised as having it either. 6. 5L electronics gave a lot of people trouble, but take the electronics off, run a mechanical pump, and the engine runs just fine but with less power... so I'd say the engine design itself is sound. The 97-up electronics seem to be holding up very well.
GM is hyping the durathing to the max, generating demand. Big demand generates big invoices.
Greg
I couldn't agree more - but not only did they hype the hell out of it, they hyped it a lot more than their production could keep up with. So now you have an engine that "everyone" wants, with dealers being allotted 1 or 2 above and beyond what customers have ordered (if they're lucky. ) So Mr. Needs A New Diesel Truck goes down to the GM dealership to buy a new Duramax, and when he starts haggling he gets laughed out of the showroom because the salesmen can afford to turn away buyers who don't want to pay what they're asking.
Besides, from reading signatures on the 6. 2L/6. 5L/Dmax 6600 site, it seems most people who buy them get extended cabs with Allisons and short boxes. I'm sorry, but if a full sheet of plywood can't fit in the bed with the tailgate up, it ain't a real truck!

I still don't like the idea of a truck, especially a diesel, with only 2 pedals, anyway.
In the past 10 years or so we've seen a shift from diesels being marketed because they have power roughly equivalent to a gasser and because they get twice the fuel mileage, to diesels being marketed because they have huge amounts of power with the fuel mileage almost achieving parity (less so under HEAVY loads. ) Gassers are catching up in longevity, too, so we diesel guys may be losing another reason to buy. Besides, does engine longevity really matter when most truck buyers won't keep it long enough to notice? Only the most hardcore will ever see 300K miles, or spend thousands to get double the stock power (or more), and everyone else is more than happy with what design engineers figured would be enough.
Face it, it's a fashion statement or trend to own a diesel these days. Have you ever seen a soccer mom in a PSD Excursion trying to negotiate a drive-up lane or parallel park?

Even those safari-ready, body-armored Land Rovers you see lined up at the grocery store make more sense - at least they have a chance of being charged by an enraged, wounded shopping cart!

That needless demand makes it more expensive for those of us who want a diesel for a reason (mileage, power, etc) to get one, and think of what it must be doing to the price of diesel fuel.