- Joined
- Mar 24, 2005
- Location
- Stanley, NC
Your 03 may be capable, and it probably is reliable, as is a Ford 300i6 or a 1985 Honda Accord, and there's nothing wrong with that.None, if by some chance in the future I get on the road pulling a load of new trucks I'll tag this. But what's your point? Are you saying that my 03 isn't as capable and reliable?
Do you not drive a deleted 6.7?
He is insinuating that youāre just a smidge off that the only difference between your truck and a newer one is tires, springs and stickers.
A lot of little and medium things that add up to make a big difference. I am by no means an "expert" or professional truck driver or anything like that. But I've driven a handful of different trucks and pulled a variety of loads, and have more experience than your average Joe.What's the smidge?
I used to occasionally pull a 9k pound dozer with an 86 F350 with 6.9 idi and it was capable of (very slowly) making it move. Didn't stop for shit and you were on the edge of your seat during the whole adventure (and it was always an adventure because something always had an issue).
Then I jumped up to a tuned 03 Duramax. My God, that truck would fly! Pulled 7-12k loads pretty well, stopped ok, I was happy with it.
Then I got an 08 Ford with the 6.4. The power was out of this world, and the truck felt so planted and controlled when towing 10k plus. Fuel mileage sucked (even deleted), but I thought everything else about that truck was almost unbeatable.
Then I got a 2011 6.7 Ford with the 6 speed. It did everything the 08 did, but better, and with waaaay better fuel mileage (both stock and deleted) and the 6 speeds truly made the truck a whole world better, along with a hundred little things they improved.
I only had that truck 6 months or so until I found a 2012 6.7 Ford I wanted more. On paper the 2011 and 2012 are the same, but I think they ironed out some first model year bugs and the 2012 Ford was all around the best truck I ever owned. I put 4k pounds in the back of it, regularly towed 10-15k pounds, and just generally used the hell out of it. One time I towed 21k pounds behind it because I thought the 200 retaining wall blocks on my trailer were 50lbs each but it turns out they were 90 lbs each, and even with 3.55 gears it wasn't a problem and pulled like a champ. I also left it all stock because the power and reliability gave me no reason to change it.
As my equipment portfolio continued to grow, I bought a better trailer with 17.5" wheels and tires, which allowed me to push on up to loads regularly in the 15-20k pound range, which was just too much for a single rear wheel truck. I also wanted to add a flatbed dump to my arsenal, and the payload capacity of an F350/3500 series truck was limited to about 5k pounds. By the time you put a steel flatbed and 1000 pounds of tools/gear/junk in a truck, your real payload is closer to 3000 pounds. The F450-550 and 4500-5500 series trucks have payload capacities up to about 11k pounds and GCWR of nearly 40k pounds, so it would allow me to pull my junk with 2k pounds of tongue weight, and have 3-4 tons of stuff in the bed. I figured if I'm going to deal with the bulkiness of dual wheels and an 8ft bed anyway, I might as well make it a 9ft bed and have a truck that will do anything I need.
I bought my 2017 Ram 5500 last November and it's not even fair to compare it to the 2012 F250. There are things I like and things I dislike, but its such an ox and pulls and controls a 15-20k pound load like the F250 did a 10k load. It rides exceptionally well for a truck with a 5.5 ton payload capacity, and even though it's a whole other class of truck, you can also tell it is another generation more advanced in almost every department. Plus it has a heated steering wheel and cooled seats
My point with all of those words is that for the past 20 years (or 30, or maybe even 40, or 100), every new generation of truck has taken a bunch of small incremental improvements and turned them into a package that is leaps and bounds better than the previous generation. A 6.9 IDI in 1986 had 170hp and 318ftlbs, and the standard 03 Cummins had nearly double that at 305/555, and the 2023 Duramax will have nearly double that at 505hp and 1085ftlbs, with every option imaginable, a great ride, good fuel mileage, and a factory warranty. On paper, or with an empty truck driving around, the differences are hard to comprehend, but throw a load behind them, and the newer generation will shine every time. Every single component is bigger, beefier, and better designed to handle the increased torque, payload, and towing capacity. And all of the big 3 are darn good at making them these days because the competition has forced them to be (and the profit margins are huge)!
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