Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 09:56:30 AMQuote from: Colin on February 07, 2019, 09:50:39 AMQuote from: Stein on February 07, 2019, 09:31:44 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.Looking to pull a dog trailer in the future and hard to look at expanding and getting a trailer without a truck to pull it. Ultimate goal is to pull a dbl axle car hauler with a ~1200 lb dog box and a ATV across the country (this is 5-10 years out) but smaller trailers building up to that. Seems unreasonable to ask that of a gas truck even if its built in a 3/4 ton truck.I would suggest doing some research on some gassers first. That Ford Eco Boost puts down some impressive numbers. A diesel is probably close to 3 times as expensive just for regular maintenance. The only way to make one pay is if you are working the snot out of it day in and day out for lots of miles and hours.Yearly maintenance on my diesel is about $150 per year.
Quote from: Colin on February 07, 2019, 09:50:39 AMQuote from: Stein on February 07, 2019, 09:31:44 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.Looking to pull a dog trailer in the future and hard to look at expanding and getting a trailer without a truck to pull it. Ultimate goal is to pull a dbl axle car hauler with a ~1200 lb dog box and a ATV across the country (this is 5-10 years out) but smaller trailers building up to that. Seems unreasonable to ask that of a gas truck even if its built in a 3/4 ton truck.I would suggest doing some research on some gassers first. That Ford Eco Boost puts down some impressive numbers. A diesel is probably close to 3 times as expensive just for regular maintenance. The only way to make one pay is if you are working the snot out of it day in and day out for lots of miles and hours.
Quote from: Stein on February 07, 2019, 09:31:44 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.Looking to pull a dog trailer in the future and hard to look at expanding and getting a trailer without a truck to pull it. Ultimate goal is to pull a dbl axle car hauler with a ~1200 lb dog box and a ATV across the country (this is 5-10 years out) but smaller trailers building up to that. Seems unreasonable to ask that of a gas truck even if its built in a 3/4 ton truck.
Quote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.
Can I ask why you want a diesel?
Quote from: stlusn30-06 on February 08, 2019, 11:17:14 AMGonna throw an option out there that I doubt will be very popular, but it's what I personally did. Because reliability and cheap maintenance over everything else for me. If your budget is 30K, and your heart is set on diesel, find a low mileage, manual transmission, 94-981/2 Dodge 2500 from a no rust state. 12 valve, no emissions crap, mechanical injection, Bosch P7100 injection pump. Minimal maintenance, cheap injectors, minimal parts to break over time. The motor is good for a million miles. If you want additional power and torque you can get that in gobs for cheap as well. Some say the best diesel set up of all time. That said, you're buying a work truck. Not a Cadillac with tow capacity. At that budget you could get a prime rig, upgrade the suspension/front end to compete with modern rigs, and be good to go the rest of your life with some cash left over to fix cracked dashboards and double sided tape down your door panels (the truck will fall apart before the drive-train does). Oh yeah, and make sure the dowel pin issue has been taken care of. I had to scour the country for a year to find the one I wanted at the price I wanted, but I found it, and I have zero regrets.Great advice! Truly a workhorse drivetrain and tough as nails. The caveat is if you want the truck to haul anyone besides yourself and/or one other person. For cross country trips you will not have enough cab space to make it comfortable for the third wheel even with the extended cab. It's not a fun time getting kids in and out of car seats either if that's a concern. If your daily and car seats it gets old.
Gonna throw an option out there that I doubt will be very popular, but it's what I personally did. Because reliability and cheap maintenance over everything else for me. If your budget is 30K, and your heart is set on diesel, find a low mileage, manual transmission, 94-981/2 Dodge 2500 from a no rust state. 12 valve, no emissions crap, mechanical injection, Bosch P7100 injection pump. Minimal maintenance, cheap injectors, minimal parts to break over time. The motor is good for a million miles. If you want additional power and torque you can get that in gobs for cheap as well. Some say the best diesel set up of all time. That said, you're buying a work truck. Not a Cadillac with tow capacity. At that budget you could get a prime rig, upgrade the suspension/front end to compete with modern rigs, and be good to go the rest of your life with some cash left over to fix cracked dashboards and double sided tape down your door panels (the truck will fall apart before the drive-train does). Oh yeah, and make sure the dowel pin issue has been taken care of. I had to scour the country for a year to find the one I wanted at the price I wanted, but I found it, and I have zero regrets.
Quote from: blackveltbowhunter on February 08, 2019, 01:25:45 PMQuote from: stlusn30-06 on February 08, 2019, 11:17:14 AMGonna throw an option out there that I doubt will be very popular, but it's what I personally did. Because reliability and cheap maintenance over everything else for me. If your budget is 30K, and your heart is set on diesel, find a low mileage, manual transmission, 94-981/2 Dodge 2500 from a no rust state. 12 valve, no emissions crap, mechanical injection, Bosch P7100 injection pump. Minimal maintenance, cheap injectors, minimal parts to break over time. The motor is good for a million miles. If you want additional power and torque you can get that in gobs for cheap as well. Some say the best diesel set up of all time. That said, you're buying a work truck. Not a Cadillac with tow capacity. At that budget you could get a prime rig, upgrade the suspension/front end to compete with modern rigs, and be good to go the rest of your life with some cash left over to fix cracked dashboards and double sided tape down your door panels (the truck will fall apart before the drive-train does). Oh yeah, and make sure the dowel pin issue has been taken care of. I had to scour the country for a year to find the one I wanted at the price I wanted, but I found it, and I have zero regrets.Great advice! Truly a workhorse drivetrain and tough as nails. The caveat is if you want the truck to haul anyone besides yourself and/or one other person. For cross country trips you will not have enough cab space to make it comfortable for the third wheel even with the extended cab. It's not a fun time getting kids in and out of car seats either if that's a concern. If your daily and car seats it gets old.Great motor in an uncomfortable as heck truck. Rides like a forklift, and loud, god are they loud motors, but they'll run forever.
Quote from: baker5150 on February 08, 2019, 04:05:52 PMQuote from: blackveltbowhunter on February 08, 2019, 01:25:45 PMQuote from: stlusn30-06 on February 08, 2019, 11:17:14 AMGonna throw an option out there that I doubt will be very popular, but it's what I personally did. Because reliability and cheap maintenance over everything else for me. If your budget is 30K, and your heart is set on diesel, find a low mileage, manual transmission, 94-981/2 Dodge 2500 from a no rust state. 12 valve, no emissions crap, mechanical injection, Bosch P7100 injection pump. Minimal maintenance, cheap injectors, minimal parts to break over time. The motor is good for a million miles. If you want additional power and torque you can get that in gobs for cheap as well. Some say the best diesel set up of all time. That said, you're buying a work truck. Not a Cadillac with tow capacity. At that budget you could get a prime rig, upgrade the suspension/front end to compete with modern rigs, and be good to go the rest of your life with some cash left over to fix cracked dashboards and double sided tape down your door panels (the truck will fall apart before the drive-train does). Oh yeah, and make sure the dowel pin issue has been taken care of. I had to scour the country for a year to find the one I wanted at the price I wanted, but I found it, and I have zero regrets.Great advice! Truly a workhorse drivetrain and tough as nails. The caveat is if you want the truck to haul anyone besides yourself and/or one other person. For cross country trips you will not have enough cab space to make it comfortable for the third wheel even with the extended cab. It's not a fun time getting kids in and out of car seats either if that's a concern. If your daily and car seats it gets old.Great motor in an uncomfortable as heck truck. Rides like a forklift, and loud, god are they loud motors, but they'll run forever. Hence the upgraded suspension. I'm not talking about a 6inch lift & mudders. I'm talking about gas shocks, springs and a more progressive leaf spring package. Would ride great. The 12s aren't crazy loud, the 24 valves were ridiculous. But def no comparison to today's rigs.
Quote from: Dhoey07 on February 07, 2019, 10:00:49 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 09:56:30 AMQuote from: Colin on February 07, 2019, 09:50:39 AMQuote from: Stein on February 07, 2019, 09:31:44 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.Looking to pull a dog trailer in the future and hard to look at expanding and getting a trailer without a truck to pull it. Ultimate goal is to pull a dbl axle car hauler with a ~1200 lb dog box and a ATV across the country (this is 5-10 years out) but smaller trailers building up to that. Seems unreasonable to ask that of a gas truck even if its built in a 3/4 ton truck.I would suggest doing some research on some gassers first. That Ford Eco Boost puts down some impressive numbers. A diesel is probably close to 3 times as expensive just for regular maintenance. The only way to make one pay is if you are working the snot out of it day in and day out for lots of miles and hours.Yearly maintenance on my diesel is about $150 per year.You're doing it yourself then...or you're not doing proper maintenance. Or you don't put any miles on your truck.
Quote from: jackelope on February 08, 2019, 03:52:31 PMQuote from: Dhoey07 on February 07, 2019, 10:00:49 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 09:56:30 AMQuote from: Colin on February 07, 2019, 09:50:39 AMQuote from: Stein on February 07, 2019, 09:31:44 AMQuote from: Woodchuck on February 07, 2019, 08:44:22 AMCan I ask why you want a diesel? The first rule of diesels is to only buy one if that is the only option unless you really want one and are willing to pay the cost up front and ongoing which is substantial to say the least.Advances in gas engines has significantly closed the gap.Looking to pull a dog trailer in the future and hard to look at expanding and getting a trailer without a truck to pull it. Ultimate goal is to pull a dbl axle car hauler with a ~1200 lb dog box and a ATV across the country (this is 5-10 years out) but smaller trailers building up to that. Seems unreasonable to ask that of a gas truck even if its built in a 3/4 ton truck.I would suggest doing some research on some gassers first. That Ford Eco Boost puts down some impressive numbers. A diesel is probably close to 3 times as expensive just for regular maintenance. The only way to make one pay is if you are working the snot out of it day in and day out for lots of miles and hours.Yearly maintenance on my diesel is about $150 per year.You're doing it yourself then...or you're not doing proper maintenance. Or you don't put any miles on your truck.I do my own maintenance, I do most of the proper maintenance (haven’t changed my diff oil or transfer case), and I’ve put 80k on it in 8 years
Whatever you do run screaming from any 6.0L Ford diesel. Don't know you'll see many for the requirements youre looking at but seriously run screaming. Have had a lot of Ford diesels in my work fleet and all have been great at regularltowing real heavy loafs except the 6.0. Those things are utter garbage.
Quote from: Jpmiller on February 09, 2019, 09:23:49 AMWhatever you do run screaming from any 6.0L Ford diesel. Don't know you'll see many for the requirements youre looking at but seriously run screaming. Have had a lot of Ford diesels in my work fleet and all have been great at regularltowing real heavy loafs except the 6.0. Those things are utter garbage.If you have a 6.0 and want to make it so you don’t have to run screaming from it, look at the bulletproof diesel stuff. Billet aluminum egr and oil coolers don’t crack like factory ones do. Get all that done to one and you’ll be hard pressed to find a better ford Diesel engine. You can do egr deletes and stuff like that too, but that’s all essentially illegal so complications could arise. The only downside to that is you need to spend $5k to do it unless you have the knowledge and tools to DIY it. My 2 diesel techs both drive 6.0 trucks. We see 20+ trucks a day and these guys know what they’re doing.