I have one on order...I hope so.
Flash
We all love the Cummins and would be in denial if we said it didn't matter to some degree...if it didn't matter, we would all still be driving trucks with Gen-1 170 hp ratings.
Flash
We all love the Cummins and would be in denial if we said it didn't matter to some degree...if it didn't matter, we would all still be driving trucks with Gen-1 170 hp ratings.
Flash
I agree, I have 3 Cummins powered trucks and none are stock
Nick
Title says it all. Will the 2017s see a power ratings increase across the board?
Flash
Its pretty simple right now the Ford has the better tow rating as far as power, and first to the top of the hill , if thats what is important then ordering a Cummins ,and wishing, is probably not going to get it.
Maybe I'm missing something...but if by "right now" you mean 2016 and by "tow rating as far as power" you actually mean torque, then the Ram/Cummins has the better rating. The Powerstroke has more HP, but for most of us, that's a secondary concern to torque.
Rating is one thing, don't care whats on paper ,just do a search on the towing in Colorado ,and then you will see who is the fastest, if thats important to be the first to the top of the hill. If it is important then the Cummins is not the truck to get there first. I don't care if the Cummins is slower with a given weight to the top of the hill, whats important is that I get there consistently living here in the west. But ordering a new 2017 ,and wishing it is going to have the same numbers as a Ford doesn't make sense . This is not a race, and IMO the Cummins gets it done well enough for me.
Numbers or ratings are one thing ,actually getting it done is another, right now Ford will get you to the next street light quicker, and to the top of the hill . Again if thats what you are buying these towing machines for then you should go for the Ford.
That video you're referring to in Colorado when they measured the fuel economy the Ford used a whopping 20% more fuel and it was only about 12 seconds faster over the 10 minute haul. For all intents and purposes the speed in which the climb happened was the same, particularly considering how non-scientific their test was (start a cell phone timer at roughly the right time, then stop it at roughly the right time at the end). Where you will see a difference though is blended hauling, which that test doesn't show. That test mainly shows that a V8 is faster than an inline 6 when you mash the peddle and keep it there until the end. Real world hauling is rarely that. This is why inline 6 engines vastly outnumber V8 engines in over the road trucks.
And even with Chevy/GMC/GM way back in 3rd place in power I don't think they're hurting to much for sales.
Even with traction control off shouldn't I be able to leave black burnout tracks everywhere with 900# of torque?