I'm going to the Ford because I not only have to get away from Dodge but
they have 4 wheel disc brakes and I havn't heard near as much bad about
their automatics even though I'm going to a 6 speed. Their engine also
pulls harder as any commerdial hauler who has used both trucks will tell
you. The fuel mileage on the Ford will be probably 3-4 mpg less. The Ford
rides a little better and is quieter. The Ford requires preheating even in
warm weather. When I went to the Ford dealer the other day to test drive
one, at 85 degrees, it didn't start until I preheated. A neighbor of mine
who just bought one had to do the same thing in warm weather. The Dodge at
45 degrees ar above required literally a 1/2 second turn of the key to
start. I don't know if Ford detunes their automatics.
Good luck
DuneJunkee <dunej...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:19991005111513...@ng-ck1.aol.com...
I have a 98.5 2500 Quad Cab Long Bed 4x4 24v Cummins and is my 2nd love of
my life (soon to be 3rd - my wife is #1 and our baby that is due January
28th will be #2). That is so that you know my biases going into this. I
also have a close friend that has a 96 12v that is nearly identical but is
just an extended cab. I fell in love with my friends 96 3 years ago when I
rode in it and vowed that I would one day own my own. I finally took the
plunge 2 months ago. I found my truck used on the internet at a dealer in
Ohio about 4.5 hrs away from me. I have made quite a few mod's to the truck
already as you can see on my signature line below. IMO, it's the best truck
on the road today by far. One advantage that Ford has is the Crew Cab and I
also think they have a better auto transmission. If you HAVE to have either
of those features you may want to look at a Ford. Otherwise look really
hard at the Dodge.
The Ford is a little faster in stock trim than the Dodge as long as they are
both unloaded. But once you put a load on em the Dodge will walk away.
Also, power increases are cheap and easy on the Dodge. I put a TST
powermax1 computer on mine in 45 minutes and it upped the engine from 235 hp
and 460 ft/lbs of torque to 275 hp and 660 ft/lbs of torque instantly. It
also improved throttle response substantially - it hit's boost right off of
idle. In stock form it was pretty quick to 2,000 rpm and then it was fast
to 3,300. Now it's fast to 2,000 and oh my god fast to 3,300! All for just
$799. I am getting 19-20 mpg unloaded and about 17 mpg pulling a 6,000 lb
flat bed trailer/Jeep. I also have a friend that has a 97 Crew Cab Dually
2wd PSD and the 3 of us pull our rigs to the dunes regularly. He only gets
12-13 mpg unloaded and 9-10 mpg loaded out of his PSD. Not only that but we
are WAY faster than him pulling the loads. The last time we went my truck
was still stock so this is a stock to stock comparison. Once he hooked up
with us we had to slow down from cruising at 75 mph to 70 mph because he
can't keep up. Now keep in mind that everyone we talk to says that there is
something wrong with his truck but they haven't been able to find anything
yet. He's trying to get Ford to buy it back - his dad is a high level ford
exec.
The best comparison between the two engines that I know of is that the same
Cummins engine (at a higher rating) is put into 18 ton over the road
trucks - they simply detune them and put them in the Dodge (hence the easy
tune back up if you'd like) it is listed as a medium duty truck engine
whereas the powerstroke is listed as a light duty truck engine. In the
larger ford's F550,650 (I think the 450 and 750 too) you can upgrade and pay
extra $ to get the ISB Cummins instead of the powerstroke. Why would they
(ford) offer it as a more expensive upgrade if it wasn't a better engine?
The reason they can't offer them on the F350 and below is because of an
exclusive contract between Dodge and Cummins for that application. Also if
you look at the drivetrains the 3/4 ton Dodge actually has pretty much the
same drivetrain (axles, transfer case, transmission) as the 1 ton Ford.
You might want to check out http://www.turbodieselregister.com and go
through the discussion groups there. For $35 you can join the group and get
the magazine and be able to post to the group and get a lot of advice on
what options you want. If I had looked into the group before I bought I
would have bought a truck with 3.54's not the 4.10's that I got. Browsing
on that site is free but to post messages you have to join. If you are even
considering buying a turbo diesel dodge I'd recommend joining for the info.
It'll be the best $35 you'll ever spend. Sorry for the long post but I just
recently went through this decision so I have a lot of fresh thoughts.
BTW - consider buying used, I saved over $8,000 and my truck has only
24,000 miles on it and that was with a 100,000 mile extended service
contract (supposedly bumper to bumper except wear items).
-Steve St.Laurent
'98 Quad Cab Long Bed (CMNSPWR), 4x4, ISB, 5sp, 4.10 LSD, Prime-loc remote
fuel filter,
boost & pyro gauges, TST Powermax, Permatech spray in liner, Grizzly
stainless nerf bars,
BFG 285/75R16 AT KO's
http://my.voyager.net/stevest
Len wrote in message <7td8ll$j4v$1...@nntp2.atl.mindspring.net>...
>Their engine also pulls harder as any commercial hauler who has used both
Mike <NoS...@EatMoreSpam.com> wrote in message
news:7tddk9$q09$1...@nntp4.atl.mindspring.net...
Chris
>The best comparison between the two engines that I know of is that the
>same<BR>
>Cummins engine (at a higher rating) is put into 18 ton over the road<BR>
>trucks - they simply detune them and put them in the Dodge (hence the
>easy<BR>
>tune back up if you'd like) it is listed as a medium duty truck engine<BR>
>whereas the powerstroke is listed as a light duty truck engine. In the<BR>
>larger ford's F550,650 (I think the 450 and 750 too) you can upgrade and
>pay<BR>
>extra $ to get the ISB Cummins instead of the powerstroke. Why would
>they<BR>
Chris
The 5.9 ISB is not available in the 550 super duty. Base motor for the 550 is
the V-10. PSD is the only upgrade for 00, auto trans standard.
Wish Dodge made a truck with 15,000 - 19,000 gvw.
Until then Ford has my Trucks.
Paul Nelson
97 Dodge 2500 CC TD (office away from office)
97 Ford super duty (F450) psd
99 Ford F-550 PSD
00 Ford F-550 PSD
00 Sterling 28,000 gvw (CAT)
>Wish Dodge made a truck with 15,000 - 19,000 gvw.
>
>Until then Ford has my Trucks.
>
Funny, the specs on my 99 say the GCVW is 18,200. Are the spec sheets wrong?
>>Wish Dodge made a truck with 15,000 - 19,000 gvw.
>Funny, the specs on my 99 say the GCVW is 18,200. Are the spec sheets wrong?
He was talking about gVwr
not gCwr. Your spec sheet is right, they are just two different specs.
Ram is gVwr to either 8800 lbs(2500) or 10,500[11,000 some models](3500)
Andrew
I can contridict myself in two sentences or less! To clarify. The ISB is not
available in the F250 thru 550 SD. It is avaiable as the base diesel in the
650-750. By base I mean lowest hp rating. Not sure on price.
Chris
Len wrote in message <7tdia3$7vh$1...@nntp2.atl.mindspring.net>...
Let me pose this question that must have been answered on this NG by now:
Does any major Medium Duty Truck manufacturer (Class 5-7)(KW, Freightliner,
International, etc.) use the 7.3 powersmoke and if so what is the GCVW of
those trucks?
I know that Freightliner puts the 5.9 Cummins in the FL-60 Tractor and with
the 17,500 rear axle it has a GCVW rating of 50,000 lbs.. Is the 7.3 used
in this manner?
Mike
Flemming@MacDonald wrote in message
<9M5L3.771$H%5.3...@sapphire.mtt.net>...
He isn't kidding, the only thing that is the same between the Ford 7.3 and
the T444E is the design, the hp is higher in the Navistar versions, I know
it will not pull "alot harder" as I have bolth, and my Ram will do the same
job, and some more(I'm talking pulling in Low Low here, actually stalled the
Ford towing), and the Ford is faster, but, it doesn't have the almost flat
torque curve of the Cummins(I-6 vs. V8, like comparing apples to oranges,)
As for the commercial versions, the B5.9 vs T444E is the same as the Ram and
F Super Duty engines, only with more power, but, the T444E is avalable with
more power(I think) only then will it pull more than a Cummins.
Evan MacDonald
The software is what gives the T444 more power than the Power Stroke. It is
limited because of emissions allowed at certain GVW and based on what the
drive train will handle as well.
Let me pose this question that must have been answered on this NG by now:
Does any major Medium Duty Truck manufacturer (Class 5-7)(KW, Freightliner,
International, etc.) use the 7.3 powersmoke and if so what is the GCVW of
those trucks?
Do they use the Mack engine?
Did you ever think that, they don't want to use the competitions engine?
RRXP689 wrote:
>
> The 5.9L is NOT the same motor found in OTR 18-wheelers.
> The ISB is NOT available in the F-450/550. It is available as the BASE
> power level in the 550/650. The PSD and a CAT engine are also available. The
> CAT carries the highest power rating.
> Other than that I agree with most of your post. I also think there is
> something wrong with your buddies PSD.
>
> Chris
>
> >The best comparison between the two engines that I know of is that the
> >same<BR>
> >Cummins engine (at a higher rating) is put into 18 ton over the road<BR>
> >trucks - they simply detune them and put them in the Dodge (hence the
> >easy<BR>
> >tune back up if you'd like) it is listed as a medium duty truck engine<BR>
> >whereas the powerstroke is listed as a light duty truck engine. In the<BR>
> >larger ford's F550,650 (I think the 450 and 750 too) you can upgrade and
> >pay<BR>
> >extra $ to get the ISB Cummins instead of the powerstroke. Why would
> >they<BR>
>Do they use the Mack engine?
>Did you ever think that, they don't want to use the competitions engine?
>
I stand corrected on this, but I think Mack engines are exclusive only to Mack
built vehicles. They don't distribute their engines as Cummins and Cat do.
Alan
I thought Cat bought Mack last year.