bret a ewing
GT Owner
- Nov 29, 2006
- 301
DOn't forget that while the small diesel in the dodge may yield a 40% improvement in fuel economy, it offers less power and uses fuel that is 50% more expensive. Fuel cost is a wash between the two and the EB has much more power and much better fuel availability. Its not a simple comparison.
I love my diesel pickup but will likely never buy another one. They no longer make financial sense.
You have another choice with the 2.7 EB V6. 325hp - 375tq.
Got one of these too in a 2012 F150 Supercab and love it. As low as 13.8 litres per 100 km.
:facepalm::shrug:agree:I'm surprised no one has offered the one true answer to Chip's quandry: Buy the F-150 with the 5.0 V-8 and have Jason Heffner install twin turbos. He would then have a 5.0 V-8 "Ecoboost" to match his twin turbo GT.
DOn't forget that while the small diesel in the dodge may yield a 40% improvement in fuel economy, it offers less power and uses fuel that is 50% more expensive. Fuel cost is a wash between the two and the EB has much more power and much better fuel availability. Its not a simple comparison.
50% more expensive??? Is that a Houston thing?
In Southern California from approximately April 2014 - October 2014, the Diesel fuel prices were the same or less than the 87 octane fuel. Of course with the EB, you need 91 octane and that fuel has consistently been above the cost of diesel all year.... until recently. at this time, gasoline prices have dropped significantly. In SoCal, diesel prices are about 10% more than 87 octane. See this website for proof: http://www.californiagasprices.com/index.aspx?fuel=D
Chevron down the street from my house, Regular gas was $2.29...
DOn't forget that while the small diesel in the dodge may yield a 40% improvement in fuel economy, it offers less power and uses fuel that is 50% more expensive. Fuel cost is a wash between the two and the EB has much more power and much better fuel availability. Its not a simple comparison.
+1
Remember when diesel was the left overs of refinement (or so urban legend has it) and cost the least?
Here in the land of exaggerated fuel prices, Diesel is just less than 10% more than premium fuel and about 20% more than regular. But this is a relatively new occurance as the majority of the year diesel has been at or below the regular prices. Don't know how this will trend in the future in the golden state, but for now - even with the broadest gap we've had all year, diesel still make economic sense.
I thought Chip once explained the reason for the high diesel fuel price was because they have learned to extract more gasoline out of the oil, making diesel a more rare byproduct. Then supply and demand forces did the rest. But it was several years ago that I read that.
Anyone wanting to tow...American diesel is the only way to go. I have a 3500 Duramax Diesel Dually (uncorked) - and she puts down a cool 650 HP with close to 1200 FT LBS of TQ. Mileage is about 18 highway and it can pull 30K lbs easy and not budge off its line.
You know what they say "It ain't a truck if it's got spark plugs"...