- Location
- Grand Junction, CO
All the swaps listed on that link are like 19mpg avg. Where is this biazrre universal idea coming from that you'll get 30-40mpg avg?
The only reason its even getting 19 is because it's a very low power motor, same reason my saturn gets 37mpg avg and I'm flooring it quite alot (just to get up to speed).
Tq by itself means absolutely noting. If an engine has half the rpm range, it better have double the tq. I think a stock LS motor actually has more tq off idle at and most definitely across the board than a stock 4bt anyway, and revs to 6krpm so it makes double the power for essentially the same mileage. Double the tq but half the rpm range is exactly the same net effect as doubling your final gearing, it doesn't add performance, power, or mileage (...well maybe crawling performance, since your motor is stuck in low range).
If you accelerated as slowly in the same rig with LS power and appropriate gearing you'd probably get the same mileage. Diesel contains a bit more energy than gasoline, but a new generation gas motor is more efficient in design than an old motor from a breadtruck.
and an LS might actually even be easier to wire up, since there are many swap harnesses that only use a couple wires.
IMO, lots of people fib and round up their numbers... then they get around their buddies or on the internet and the numbers magically grow.
I'm not claiming any more than what that MPG average thread on 4BTSwaps says. Mid-20's is about the best they'll do on average. That thread has lows of 18 MPG and highs up to 29 MPG. It all depends on how you drive it, how you gear it, what transmission (manual vs. auto) and how the vehicle is built, obviously. IMO most 4BT's are in big, heavy 4x4's so that has an effect on the numbers as well. The one guy that claimed 32 MPG is running a Isuzu 4BD1T, which is a totally different animal compared to a Cummins 4BT.
So you're telling me that a 6.0l LQ4 is going to get 15-20 MPG? Riiiighht... I'm around 1 ton trucks GM trucks with 6.0's all day long at work and 8-9 MPG is the best they'll do. So if a LQ4 is getting 9 MPG and the average 4BT is getting 25 MPG, then it's getting 2.7 times the mileage! Hard to argue real world numbers, isn't it?
Torque means everything when it comes to moving a vehicle... your talk of splitting power and doubling RPM is interesting, never thought about it that way. Fuzzy math to say the least.. Yes, you have to gear a 4BT differently than a gas motor, why is that a surprise to you?
More than a few people have mentioned how these are 'old' tech... apparently nobody realizes there is a new version of the 4BT? There's a Cummins 4.5l QSB that is computer controlled, makes more torque than a 'old' 4BT and gets better mileage as well... it also burns MUCH cleaner exhaust. This QSB 4.5l is basically a 4 cyl version of the newer Cummins 6.7l in the Dodge trucks, it has a common rail injection system, the geartrain is in the back, rather than the front, etc. They're not nearly as friendly to turn up, as they are 100% computer controlled and Cummins is holding tight onto the software. On top of that they're not rated for on-road use. A Cummins tech has claimed that with a better turbo and a different tune, a QSB 4.5l can make 300 Horsepower and well over 600 ft/lbs. Due to the ease of finding cheap 4BT's and how new the QSB engines are, plus the lack of software knowledge, it's obvious to see why they're not being used near as much.
Obviously you don't like diesels... that's fine. Some people do, some people don't. I like LSx engines and I like diesel engines... :greg: I've swapped a 5.3l into my old TJ but my next engine swap will be a diesel.