04Ram2500Hemi
Observer
I'll be curious about the final price tag. i think it's a cool truck, but I don't think it's going to be cheap.
Everything I read about the Chevy diesel is it's great until you need to go over 30 in the dirt. And it's great if you drive in the city and never have to accelerate. And that's it's disgustingly horrible on the freeway. And the mileage and the engine characteristics on the freeway are terrible.
But that's the story of small displacement diesels. They just don't produce the power for speed.
Everything I read about the Chevy diesel is it's great until you need to go over 30 in the dirt. And it's great if you drive in the city and never have to accelerate. And that's it's disgustingly horrible on the freeway. And the mileage and the engine characteristics on the freeway are terrible.
But that's the story of small displacement diesels. They just don't produce the power for speed.
Everything I read about the Chevy diesel is it's great until you need to go over 30 in the dirt. And it's great if you drive in the city and never have to accelerate. And that's it's disgustingly horrible on the freeway. And the mileage and the engine characteristics on the freeway are terrible.
But that's the story of small displacement diesels. They just don't produce the power for speed.
If you want the ultimate in highway performance and 0-60 times, get a sports car. This stupid and singular fascination with acceleration and straight-line performance has been ruining a lot of North American trucks...
Everything I read about the Chevy diesel is it's great until you need to go over 30 in the dirt. And it's great if you drive in the city and never have to accelerate. And that's it's disgustingly horrible on the freeway. And the mileage and the engine characteristics on the freeway are terrible.
But that's the story of small displacement diesels. They just don't produce the power for speed.
Everything I read about the Chevy diesel is it's great until you need to go over 30 in the dirt. And it's great if you drive in the city and never have to accelerate. And that's it's disgustingly horrible on the freeway. And the mileage and the engine characteristics on the freeway are terrible.
But that's the story of small displacement diesels. They just don't produce the power for speed.
I was impressed with my brother's Montero Sport with a 2.4 Diesel. Fully-loaded and we were cruising nicely at 75mph with decent passing power. Which makes me wish i have a diesel on my Jeep since it can use some low end to get push this rolling block of kleenex.
Having just spent a fair bit of time in a Nissan Pulsar with a 108HP 1.5l turbodiesel, I had the same experience. I certainly couldn't rev that thing out the way I would a gasoline engine, but that thing had more than enough grunt to get me (and 3 other passengers) up to highway speeds (75mph) without any drama.
The 3.2l inline 5 turbodiesel that will supposedly be an option for the upcoming ranger should provide even better highway and hauling performance; the reviews from overseas have been extremely favorable.
Its all realitive. If your a v8 or high strunng v6 type thats the same type of feed back you give the Subarus too. Tough 18yrs with the 170hp Subarus has been fine plenty fast and gets it done without any drama. The 4cylinder toyota types that went Diesel canyon or colorado all seem to like the power and mileage. I was following a blog fwc owner doing a 3month trip to Alaska from Main. Loaded heavy he was really pleased with the truck 22-25mpg 70-85mph pending headwinds. His toyota struggled hard doing those speeds and 12-14 mpg was typical.
No its not a V8 thats for sure or a duel turbo v6. But everyone I know who has the GM 2.8 has been really happy with it so far.
I was talking to a guy at the fuel station when I was fueling up. He drives one of those 1 ton transit vans with the little powerstroke, I thought it was a 3.2? Anyways he said the first engine threw a rod at around 80k and its been in the shop for multiple other engine issues. Really his mileage wasn't even that good, if I remember it was around 15.
I was talking to a guy at the fuel station when I was fueling up. He drives one of those 1 ton transit vans with the little powerstroke, I thought it was a 3.2? Anyways he said the first engine threw a rod at around 80k and its been in the shop for multiple other engine issues. Really his mileage wasn't even that good, if I remember it was around 15.
Could be me getting older, but I'll take 30 mpg on the highway and never needing to drop a gear vs. 16 mpg and the 'potential' to pass someone at 95 mph.