Barnburner
New Member
They didnt strangle the engine. They just softened up the initial fuel strategy off idle. It's a truck, not a Mustang. If you want to boil the tires at stop lights, buy something else. If you want to pull a heavy trailer and allow it to survive a couple hundred thousand miles, do it this way. Alot of the strategy is due to your wonderful government regulations as well. If you could keep those morons out of the puzzle, the trucks would be better off.
I have replaced way too many torque converters and transmissions on tow rigs Dodges, Chevs and Fords to know that after doing one or two of them, they all suck to work on.
Dont knock them until you hang a 44 ft, 19,000# trailer behind one and accelerate on to the freeway. It'll get it done.
I drove the QA1 truck and trailer for a couple years all over the country. The trailer was over 19000# loaded. Crew Cab F350 Dually 4x4, 6.4 auto.
We average 14 plus MPG on the Hot Rod Power Tour this year through the Kentucky mountains. It pulled it just fine.
My complaint about mine is the fuel mileage. It is an'08 single rear wheel crew cab 4x4. I like the pulling power, but fuel mileage is nothing like my 6.0 or 7.3 was. I have not had any warranty issues to this point.
I have replaced way too many torque converters and transmissions on tow rigs Dodges, Chevs and Fords to know that after doing one or two of them, they all suck to work on.
Dont knock them until you hang a 44 ft, 19,000# trailer behind one and accelerate on to the freeway. It'll get it done.
I drove the QA1 truck and trailer for a couple years all over the country. The trailer was over 19000# loaded. Crew Cab F350 Dually 4x4, 6.4 auto.
We average 14 plus MPG on the Hot Rod Power Tour this year through the Kentucky mountains. It pulled it just fine.
My complaint about mine is the fuel mileage. It is an'08 single rear wheel crew cab 4x4. I like the pulling power, but fuel mileage is nothing like my 6.0 or 7.3 was. I have not had any warranty issues to this point.