houstonscott
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2010
- Messages
- 3,674
- Location
- Oglesby, Texas
- Tractor
- Kubota L3800, Kubota GR2120, Kubota RTV1100, Kubota 5100sc
I agree, but I don't consider a F150 as anything but light duty. F150 is a grocery getter.
Its a light duty engine designed for a grocery getter. Heavy duty diesels are still gear driven, no chains and absolutely no belts.
I'm waiting for the "NO Engine Option". Then go and get a good reliable proven Jap Industrial Diesel. In fact I would go for the no seats option. Then get some NICE cloth seats. Driving a Titan PU today as a rental. Nice driving truck but what a god awful fugly interior! The way, they ALL are it seems. More like cheap outdoor furniture.
In the marine diesel community, Cummins is light duty. It’s relative.
Yep, suppose just like a real tractor, all gear tranny. :laughing:Its a light duty engine designed for a grocery getter. Heavy duty diesels are still gear driven, no chains and absolutely no belts.
:thumbsup:Nothing like some good competition to keep companies from resting on their laurels.
Not to divert the thread, cause I'm looking forward to the new diesels from Ford and GM, but did the Ecodiesel die off? When you try to Build Your Own on the Ram website, the diesel is not a choice. What happened?
In supertankers, yes, then Wartsila 96 is the norm.In the marine diesel community, Cummins is light duty. Itç—´ relative.
Is this the engine with opposing pistons, supercharged and turbo charged?
First time I was exposed to Wakeshau-Pierce diesels looking at the drawings they are opposing cylinders firing within a common cylinder.
To me it was a wild design.
So maybe I brain-farted but thought this was also the same design for the F-150??
and if this is so, I've yet to read any articles speaking of its bahzillion miles testing blah, blah, blah like they did on the Power Storke and ego-boost....so wha-dup wit dis.....????
Oh and IF anyone drives a Tundra and knows about the MPGs this truck gets then the 4x4 mpgs on the 150 PS is a dream!
I'd take it. Gottah get tractor on the public scales to get a cert on full weight with a BB. Piecing it all together the SWAG is about 9400 lbs or so (utility metal bed trailer as well).
The Tundra struggled from Halletsville to Giddings to Paige doing 60 was the sweet spot. 65? fuggeet-about-it!
Been window shopping the F-250 6.2L.
But if the F-150 in a 4x4 Supercrew with a 6.5 foot bed come with a tow rating of 11k then may be all in.:thumbsup:![]()