I've had all of the big three. Dodge, Chevy, Ford. I have NO loyalty to any of them. Right now I drive a 99 Ford F350 SuperDuty 4x4 with the Powerstroke 7.3 turbodiesel. It has been the best towing machine I've owned so far. No problems in 50.000 miles. I get 19 highway at 75mph and 17 in town empty. Not bad for a 7900 lb truck. The truck and empty 12,000lb gvwr flatbed tip the scales at 10,400lbs. My only complaint: The front brakes warp too easily on the 99 models but they fixed that for the later ones.
My wife drives a 94 3/4 ton 4x4 Chevy Suburban diesel. We have 130,000 miles on it and the only engine problem we've had is the PMD electronic control on the injection pump getting fried twice. It has been amazingly well put together. Very happily surprised because I thought we'd just keep it a couple years. It only pulls 7500 lbs though. The GM diesels are lighter duty than the Cummins and Powerstroke. Also cost a lot less as an option too. You get what you pay for. We get 16 in town and on the road with it with the 4:10 gears. Too high a gear for good milage.
My old Dodge Ram 4x4 was good. The Cummins gave some problems with injection and throttle problems. The tranny was junk. (We had the auto). Things started to really fall apart at 65,000 miles on the rest of the truck. But overall I liked it. I needed a crew cab with the real back seat full size doors for the kids so I got the Ford.
The new GM's with the Duramax will be worth a look but first year is always a risk. They were having some hot weather testing problems with it. Production is delayed but they are starting to trickle out. (I belong to a GM diesel club). The Allison transmission sounds like it will be a definate winner and will blow away the others. I will wait to see how it goes. And dealer support will be the key. GM dealers never knew how to work on the old GM (Detroit diesel designed) engines. Dealer support was horrible. My local Dodge dealer farmed the diesel work out to Cummins. The Ford dealers usually have a diesel tech but you have to check around for a good one. Or better yet, take it to the International Truck dealer for engine service.
All three make good trucks and we are lucky to have the choices we do. All have their advantages and disadvantages. All three make lemons and all three have troublefree trucks. Drive them all and visit the service departments! That is probably key. If you do have problems you want good service and not all dealers are the same of course. Just go with what works good for you at the time and is able to feel your needs. And have fun shopping!!!
And remember: Real truck and tractors don't have spark plugs! /w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif
Brad, Kubota L3010HST, loader, R4 tires
Pictures at
http://albums.photopoint.com/j/AlbumIndex?u=179207&a=9183978