Why? Because, since the invention of the automobile, people have been hot rodding.
Same as hot rodding a Viper, a Corvette, or a Hayabusa that already will break 195mph bone stock.
I know what you mean, the problem is that most of the people who hot rod their car or trucks are usually the ones who then are then complaining about their POS that blew a engine, tranny, or rear and the dealer won't honor their warranty and they can't afford the replacement parts and labor.
Some of the comments on each brands respective message boards are rather surprising. They wiped out their heavy duty tranny running their programmer at a level they knew would cause issues, or bend their tie rod street racing with a programmer yet expect the manufacturer to pay for repairs.
If you wanna play you gotta pay
Originally Posted by jcmseven
I am not thrilled myself about the extra emissions controls on the new trucks, but the two trucks I have had post-DPF have run pretty darned well, even with the "emissions junk" on them. In addition, one of them gets better fuel mileage than any truck (gas or diesel) I have ever owned, which somewhat disputes that the DPF trucks cannot get good fuel economy. To each his own, but personally it would take a lot to get me to pull my DPF off and take the chance on failing inspection, voiding manufacturer's warranty and have it maybe not work out as I thought it might.
Not sure if you ever watch the show top gear, on one episode where they wanted to show how driving styles have a large effect on fuel economy, they took a toyota prius and raced it around their test course. Following the prius within a length or two the whole times was a BMW M3 or M5, after so many laps they checked fuel useage and the prius averaged 17 MPG while the M3 or M5 averaged over 19 MPG. Shows how driving style can really effect MPG.