And you will rebuilt 3,or maybe even 4 of them before the diesel will need to be rebuilt.
@sneakypete SO what? I've got 600 bucks laying around anytime. That don't hardly even hurt. Can't ever say that working on a diesel. And I bet when it does go, It will cost more than those three or four times I built mine. maybe twice that. All at once. POW! Right in the kisser.
And that ain't even taking into account that the motor might be chunked. If I chunk a 350, I can get another one to build for a couple hundred bucks and a cold pack of PBRs... Can't say nothing near that for a diesel either.
Your gas engines won't even have half the torque of a modern V-8 or inline 6 diesel,and torque is what moves the load and pulls up the hills. My 2006 GMC diesel has 665 ft lbs of torque at 1600 RPM. There is no way in hell your V-8 gasoline GM engines can even come close to matching that,and at such a low RPM number.
So what? I don't need all that. Look, most anything I do is hauled on a car trailer. Maybe if I was hauling a backhoe around you'd have a point. But overkill. I got all the haul I need. After that it's about scoot. And I got all of that too.
Maybe that is part of your dilemma - You might think I run stock motors. I do not.
And btw, hang a 205/208 doubler tcase in my truck, and I will drag your truck all over the parking lot with my itty bitty tree fitty. I have done it before. You want torque? Gears do that.
And btw. GVW on a horse trailer can easy be 10k - Four horses would limit out a car trailer. Especially Clydes.
You also don't have a 6 speed Allison transmission with overdrive.
Yep. Next 5spd I get I am keeping. But that would be so I could comfortably go back to 4:55s... Back to 1T land. Otherwise, I really don't need it. not much good on mountain highways. I would rather spend that money on lockers and that 205/208 Doubler I was talking about. They'd do me more good.
It has nothing to do with hating them.
[...] I can see enough lift to give you adequate tire clearance for wider/taller tires,but I see lots of people driving around in lifted trucks whose heads barely come up to then door bottoms,and they have to open the door by remote control and climb up a ladder to get in it. No way in hell you can do any actual work with a truck like that,anymore than you can take that same truck you drive to work and win mud races with it.
I have had trucks with 13-16" of lift, and 37-44" tires, and I would go back to it in a New York minute if I could. That tall boy will go places in 2wd your truck (or any other) couldn't go with 4wd and chains.
Just in snow - I have jumped out of my truck and went hip deep in the snow. See them fat ol swampers put you on top of snow, just like snow shoes. Same with loose snow - I won't be dragging body till you are in over your hood. Same in mud, Same in water. And I probably won't tip as fast either.
The real problem with em is that they so outpace anything else that the only thing that can help you in trouble is another skyjacker (or a skidder or a cat). Nothing else can even come close.
Since diesel engines are basically the same design as gasoline engines,but use compression to run the engine,they don't even have a real ignition system other than glow plugs and the starter. Since a lot of "won't start" problems are related to the ignition,this is a plus in the favor of diesels.
Not really - I carry plugs, wires, cap, rotor, coil, and all I need to rebuild an HEI distributor onboard. Cheap and easy.
As for the computers,all the modern trucks have them,and if I lived where you live,it is likely I would carry a new one still in the box around with me as a spare.
That is a mighty expensive venture. Better not to need one...
Granted,you CAN remove the computer and associated wiring and other doo-dahs from a gas truck and revert to points and plugs,but I don't see that as much of an advantage because you can do the same with a diesel if you want. It IS probably a lot cheaper to do this with a gas engine,though. Never really researched it with the diesel. Or cared to.
No, you really can't. That is an act of Congress. A full gut, end to end. And most of the drive train won't work without a pooter Nor will the dash. So the way you do that is gut it all and go old school, which puts me right back in my beloved square bodies without all that dang work.
That is true regardless of what you are operating,but there can be no question that "simpler is better" in that case. I see no reason why a diesel truck would be any more of a problem than a gasoline truck in those circumstances.
The cost of parts. Like I said, they fifteen-hundred-dollar you to death. Next.
If it makes you happy,I am happy for you. I have no desire to ever again own a gasoline powered truck unless it is something like the 400 dollar "beater" Ranger pu I use to haul trash with and for other local stuff to keep from putting too many miles on my diesel. My days of buying new trucks are over,and I never did have any "buying 60 thousand dollar truck days".
Well the most I have ever paid for a ride is 3500 bucks. And most way less than half of that. I have flipped spendier iron, but I don't drive it. More than likely it is something I paid five hundred for, that is kinda straight and has good bones... Now I may throw a few grand at it to jack it up (power and height) and tires every time... But I can easy work in less than 10k with all the bells and whistles - Usually way less than that.
The one I am in now was part of a trade for my last high boy. And I got enough out of that in cash alone to buy me out of it - So the truck was basically free. She's getting tired now, but she don't owe me a thing.