Pickup ownership experience

   / Pickup ownership experience #31  
Some various rambling from my expieriences...

I have towed with an older Chevy S10('86), Chevy 1500hd('76), Ford F250('89), and my Current Ram 2500 Cummins('01). I also used a Ford F450('01). All of the trucks were 4x4, except the F450.

The quality of tow went in that order too. The S10 towed ok, but was not very powerful(early 2.8-v6). I hauled a lot in the bed, but did light towing. The Chevy 1500HD towed ok, small tractor, and a few 1-yard concrete buggies.

I notice a big difference when I moved to the F250/Ram2500 series. They are more sure on the road, handle better, track better, and brake better. I have had 8000lbs on the rear hitch of both, as well as hauling an 11' camper. They are heavier trucks, they hold the road better, and just plain work better when towing heavier weights.

The F450 towed very well. Towing the same 8000lb Bobcat load, you hardly knew it was back there. Had the trailer plug come loose once; even when braking without the trailer brakes, it did it no problem. It towed a bit better than the 3/4 tons, and MUCH better than the 1/2 ton.

Right now we have two trucks. One is the '01 Ram2500 4x4 xcab longbed Cummins/auto. The other is an '04 Ram1500 quad cab shortbed 4x2 4.7/auto. I have towed a little with the 1/2 ton while the other truck was having brakes done. It towed ok, but what a difference! Just the way the lighter truck handled the road, braking, turning, was way different from the 3/4 ton. It did it fine, but I would not want to do it often. I do not think it was something just in this 1/2 ton; I think stepping from the 3/4 ton to any 1/2 ton would have shown the differences...

Based on using our 1/2 ton pickup, and others I have been around, I would not tow a 24' trailer with it, even it the weight is less than the 7000lb gvwr. The truck will handle the weight, but the size out on the road, and if you get a wind just or cross wind... Nope...

I have driven the Ram1500 from Sacramento to just past Palm Springs, well as local driving. The 4x2 quad cab sure handles and drives nicer than a 3/4 ton 4x4...

My only dislike with the Ram1500 is the 5spd auto seems to shift a lot. Guess a 5spd would though...

My understanding is the Ram Hemi likes Premium fuel??? If this is true, it would be more expensive at the pump.

For mileage, here is my recent comparison. I made two trips from here to Indio, which is just outside of Palm Springs. I made the trips a little over a week apart, same route, similar weather and conditions. The route had flat valley driving, and then mountian driving through Tehachapi. I took it easy, trying for a bit of mileage, but was not overly thrifty about it. My '01 Ram2500 4x4
with Cummins, auto, and 4.10 gearing got the best mileage I have since having it new. It pulled 18.1mpg combined flatland and mountian.

A week later, I took the other truck "04 Ram1500 quad cab shortbed 4x2, 4.7/auto with I think 3.55 gears. The best I got was about 18.3mpg.

Woul the 1500 tow your load? Yes. Would I do it? Maybe if it was a 10 mile run from the shop over to the track. Past that, no...

Whatever you get, make sure it has the tow package. If possible, the camper package is good too(usually has a larger rear sway bar).

Having been around stock cars when I was growing up(just street stocks, 1/4 mile paved oval), and done a little trailering, I would look at:
3/4 ton
Long bed crew or quad cab
Tow and camper package
extended mirror option

I would use a 3/4 ton. We never had the luxury of a big trailer like yours. We had the car on the trialer, and a bed-load of tools, spare tires, spare parts, fuel, compresser, generator, sometimes camp gear for weekend races. Even with room in a big trailer, I could see extra stuff going in the truck... I like a long bed. I can haul more, it handles the road well. I would go right for a quad or crew cab. You can carry pit crew, extra guests, and have a little more lockable space too. Since having xcab and quad cabs, I could never go back to a regular cab... Even in a 3/4 ton, get a tow and camper package. You'll get better cooling for the engine and tranny. You get overload springs, and bigger sway bars.

If I were in your position, IMHO, I would go right to a Dodge Ram2500 Cummins with quad cab and tow packages. I like the Ford F250 too, but like the Dodge just a little better. You would do well with any of the "big-3" heavy duty pickups. I think they are pretty even competitively.

One other idea... Get a used truck, and use the money saved so you can race more

Curiously, what are you racing? Where? /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #32  
I dont like either, but if I had to chose then it would be the chevy. I have an 03 Jeep, and the german motor car company vehicles are garbage, dont care that its built here. Would never buy another even if they came out with a real retro charger. JMO /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif
 
   / Pickup ownership experience
  • Thread Starter
#33  
Thanks for all of the good advice!
By the way, I presently use a 1984 Chevy C 3500 crew cab dually with a 454 V8. It handles the load ok, but doesn't have terrific power with the carb vs todays fuel injected engines. In fact, power wise, the 454 is just a little better than the 360 Dodge Magnum was.
To answer your question, I have an IMCA modified that we run here in Eastern Nebraska. If one is so inclined, you can race Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday every weekend from April to September without going more than two hours.
However due to various reasons, costs, lack of sponsors, time commitment, politics, etc. I don't see myself being able to run much this year and may likely end up selling the Modified. At that point, if I decide to continue racing, I may look at a dwarf car. Or, if my son shows interest, we may start him in a mini-sprint. Either way, the 24' trailer can go and be replaced with a smaller, perhaps even open trailer. For that reason, I need a truck that can pull the big trailer if needed, but it doesn't necessarily need to tow it well, often or far.
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #34  
Funny, I just heard my wife on the phone talking with her Mom. Seems her Dad is complaining about the gas mileage his Hemi is getting and his driving her Impala everywhere and letting the truck sit. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #35  
Have you considered a throttlebody FI like Holley has for the existing truck? Might work better then the carb, and get you a little better mileage?

Ya, it is hard enough to have family time, time to work on the car, and get to the races, and start again for next week. That's when things are good... If the car gets wrecked, there's even more work. It is hard enough to make one track, much less the local cricuit.

Sure is fun though!

Hey, does anybody run speedway bikes back there. They run a local track, and sure are fun to watch Fast Fridays
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #36  
I have an 04 Dodge Ram RC/4wd/Hemi and get about 13.5mpg in mixed driving. I also drive pretty aggressively/fast, so my gas mileage actually goes down on the highway. On the occassion that I drive only slightly aggressively, the truck gets about 14.5mpg. Not great numbers, but this is the most fun I've had with a truck in two decades. I have a cold air intake, Corsa catback exhaust system and with this set-up it runs fine on regular gas. Mid-grade is recommend by Dodge. I didn't wait too long to mod the truck, so I can't say how it runs regular gas at OEM spec. Zero problems in the first year of ownership, so I would definitely buy again. Even waiting to see if they drop the 6.1 Hemi in the Ram 1500. I've never towed, so I can't help you there. I would recommend visiting Dodge & Chevy forums to see what problems the owner's are having.
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #37  
In 98' we got a 96' ram 1500 with the 360 in it,then we bought a 26' fifth wheel camper,hooked the camper up,filled the truck with gas and went on a test drive with the camper,probably 35 miles round trip and the truck used almost a 1/4 tank of gas,and struggled,in 2000 got a 01'2500 ram cummins diesel w/ the 6 spd tranny,pulled the 26' camper like it was nothing,then we traded the 26' for a 32' w/2 slide outs,big difference,and then dad got a 32' gooseneck to haul his farmall tractors which I pull to shows,I have pulled this trailer w/3 farmall c's and 1 farmall b,that won't happen again,now I just pull the trailer w/ 3 tractors on it,but my truck does fine with that.

the great thing about the new diesel trucks is that you can turn up the horse power and usually get better fuel milage by doing it,I have the adjustable box w/ big injectors,a different clutch to handle the extra H.P. and a BHAF.
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #38  
For everyone here: BHAF = Big Honkin Air Filter, is a retrofitted big rig airfilter which flows much better than stock and doesn't let all the junk through like a K&N does.

I would agree with the other poster, look into a fuel injection kit for the dually, and if you need a MPG daily driver add another vehicle. You are way ahead of the game with the old dually. You could add a real nice multi-port injection kit and a new smaller car for mpg for a fraction of what the new truck would cost. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Pickup ownership experience #39  
I just purchased (Jan.) my 05 Chevy 2500 HD 4x4 w/ Duramax and Allison trans. I use it to tow my 3 trailers, mainly my homemade beavertail with 2615 tractor on it (about 7000 Lb.) I barely know it's behind me. Your finances may not warrant the extra cost of the diesel truck and the higher fuel costs. But I get 17-18 MPG when not towing and 13-14 towing (19.5-20 MPG @55 MPH but who drives 55). The 02 chevy 1500 4x4 I traded in never got that mileage empty or towing. I compared my MPG vs. 20,000 miles per year and I save about $600-700 in fuel cost over my previous gas truck. I justified my purchase based on mileage, longevity of the diesel and added towing capacity.
 

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