Enthusiast III
Thanks Capitan obvious. Ha ha. I didn't say i can't. I said it's a freakin pain in the ass. Plus, here in NL, they have no clue how to lay out a parking lot property.My wife who grew up in england driving what i would consider a matchbox car has no issues parking our f150...It's got a long wheel base then a JKU, so no surprise it doesn't turn the same.
No random preconcieved biases. I lived 10 years North of 60 and a cold snap of 40 below could last 6 weeks. The only way a diesel was reliable was if it ran 24/7. And a lot of them did that in Yellowknife. But you could shut off a gas engine overnight. And that was 20 years ago when diesels were bulletproof.Anyway, my point here is that a person shouldn't pick gas or diesel based on random preconceived biases about them
Talking payload, a base F150 has room for 5 passengers and a few suitcases just like a Crown Vic.I'm not aware of a car currently sold in the US that's still on a full-frame platform.
Advocate I
Sorry, but facts would include data and sources. So, let's play with some numbers...Talking payload, a base F150 has room for 5 passengers and a few suitcases just like a Crown Vic.
And those are facts, the F150 is designed to replace the passenger car and deliver all the passenger car attributes like a cushy ride while giving suburbia a crewcab family station wagon. Great vehicles but easily and often overloaded. If you are shopping used..... It'll a rare F150 with a payload upgrade option..... Even shopping new an F150 on the dealer lot with a max payload or towing option will be scarce. Any F250 will be a better choice.
Advocate I
Fair 'nough... if you're living in 40-below weather, considerations are certainly different. I suspect that less than 0.0000001% of this forum live where it's continually 40-below, so my advice was more tailored to the "average person" rather than the extremes. BTW, 20 years ago diesels were bullet-proof? In the 2000 model year GM still was using the 6.5 "Detroit" (a real shame that name got sullied with it) diesel. I don't know anybody that calls the 6.2/6.5 Detroits "bulletproof." The D'max came out in '01... (though, you could argue '01 D'max trucks started showing up about this time in 2000).No random preconcieved biases. I lived 10 years North of 60 and a cold snap of 40 below could last 6 weeks. The only way a diesel was reliable was if it ran 24/7. And a lot of them did that in Yellowknife. But you could shut off a gas engine overnight. And that was 20 years ago when diesels were bulletproof.
Todays diesels..... my buddy owns a Transit Mix Company. After Macks he only buys the 3500 series trucks for work. In the past 5 years hes had them all. First a Duramax, it developed problems every 6 months. At one point it was in the dealership 6 weeks waiting for parts so he bought a Cummins..... and chipped it. Man he regrets that decision it never ran right and the dealership cancelled his warranty so it got sold and he bought Ford.... the 6.0L.... and did all the "upgrades" which should have been "warranty".... but it never ran reliably so he bought a 3500 series Chevy with a gas engine. Hes had that at least 2 trouble free years. While it is "his" truck it sees multiple drivers and it often tows a tandem duals 5th wheel trailer. 2 years old, it has 36K miles, 60K kms driven hard. He'll never buy another diesel pickup.
So rather than accusing others of being biased and lacking knowledge, check the mirror. While I agree the modern gas engine is equally complex, the manufacturers seem to have figured out how to keep them reliable. The forums on RVers with diesels are full of trouble shooting threads... like "Help my diesel is going into limp mode every 15 miles" and even the dealership mechanics don't have a clue. Never see that with a gas engine. Todays diesels have nothing in common with the bulletproof 12V or 7.3L of 25 years ago.
But don't take my word for it, read the threads on diesel problems. And if you are overlanding in Africa, South America, read the threads on diesel fuel vs the modern North American diesel engine.
Advocate I
Resale doesn't make up for jack? I just don't understand that stance. I still get offers on my truck on a regular basis of 35k+ and it's 10 years old with 120k miles. But, I'll probably keep it "forever." So sure, I paid $52k instead of about $45k for a gasser... but at 120k miles and 10 years of the use my truck has has, a gasser would be DONE. Fuel filters? I have an adapter and run cheap CAT filters. Oil changes? Sure, they're expensive because I run Amsoil, but I do them way less often. We use Amsoil in the Trackhawk... it's just as much.Resale doesn't make up for Jack. That's something the pro-diesel guys use to justify their bean counting. Right now, diesels are more expensive in every way. The DPF and HPP pricing is insane. Resale might get back half the price of the upgrade cost of the diesel, but that won't even cover the fuel filters and oil.
In the great white north, my Cummins actually starts and warms QUICKER than my 6.2. I have no idea if it has an electric ''rapid heat'' like Ford does, but it does have an intake heater of some sort. No block heater, no pan heater.
Problem. The diesel can't idle too well in the winter. It clogs the DPf. It'll go into high idle and guzzle DEF. 2 gallons per tank of diesel. (1/25.) And when it does go into high idle, it'll wake up every camper in a hundred miles. It's almost exactly like a jet taking off. Many people joke that my Cummins is attempting to ''fly away''.
Avoid diesel at all cost. If your truck is so big or heavy that you can't avoid it, so be it. Otherwise, build a gasser.
Advocate I
Advocate I
Contributor III
Advocate I
You can't handle anyone disagreeing with you. This is an Overlanding forum, not the gospel according to MidOH.Don't get me wrong I love diesels.
Just not in consumer grade momo trucks. If you like the idea of paying for my kids college tuition, I'll surely appreciate it. But you could just cut out the middle man, and pay me directly. Save yourself the trouble.
I don't care about the globe, I don't care what a hobo on the sidewalk offered for your truck. This ain't a pissing match. Stick to Glamis if that's your deal.
If you can't handle a master tech telling you to avoid modern little diesels, then that's on you. DPF, DEF, EGR, ain't ready for primetime yet. Avoid the diesel Nissan Titan, ZR2, F150, especially.
Advocate I
Advocate I
Lol. I replaced my CP4 at around 100k as preventive maintenance... but I've also had a lift pump and filtration on it since about 5k.Got a nice sale on Airdogs and cp4 to 3 conversions. While supplies last, and while my backyard wire harness squirrels are all dead.
I accept kidneys, small children, weeks on Epstein Island, along with American Express.