You’re kind of all over the place now. Go find a HP/T chart for your engine and post it here. I’ll bet it’s about 1450/1650 ft lbs @ 1000. 1077 ft lbs is a lawn mower
Time to buy a new semitruck, but not sure what brand
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Flatbed1991, Nov 28, 2018.
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basedinMN_ Thanks this.
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I'm really looking forward to the thread a couple years from now with you complaining about your motor being toast after only 300-400k miles and International giving you the run around (did you get the extended warranty?).
I learned all I know from a combination of old hands giving me direction, learning from people on this website who have 20+ years experience driving and personal experience and experimentation (i.e. finding that keeping the truck hot and where she likes to pull strong is where she seems to get the best economy).
Our main mechanic that I deal with would be slapping you upside the head for babying that motor from factory. He has said to every driver that gets a new truck, run it hot and hard for the first 50,000 miles at least to break it in properly. "Give 'er ####" were his exact words.
And guess what? Aside from some faulty sensors, every single new X15 has been trouble free since the beginning. Those three long hoods are just going through their first safety this month and have been the cheapest trucks in maintenance on the year (according to the shop manager). Even cheaper than the freaking CAT units. That's saying something.Dan.S, Dave_in_AZ, Brettj3876 and 4 others Thank this. -
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Get a 389 with the 565 HP performance X15.
Something with like a 300 inch WB, and minimum 100 inch sleeper.Scooter Jones and cke Thank this. -
the rings aren't going to seat right and might even end up being an oil burnerLast edited: Dec 11, 2018
cke, Dan.S, Nothereoften and 1 other person Thank this. -
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Anyone know the torque rise is on that A26? The old maxidyne E-6's w/5 speed had a 35% rise with max torque @1050. They were built to lug and lug but if you put more fuel to them they were known to crack the block on #6
I have to get 1 more thing straight. You had a glider all spec'd out but decided to go with a new motor from the same ppl that gave us the lovely shatforce. That's one leap of faith too far for me.Last edited: Dec 11, 2018
Rubber duck kw Thanks this. -
There is no such thing as “my truck gets between 6.5-7.5 mpg” or similar statements. If you track your fuel mileage, you know what your average is. My old Peterbilt got 7.6 for the entire time I owned it. This LT is at 8.7 since I bought it November of 17’ with February through the end of last month at 8.9. The first 3 months I owned it I didn’t do that great between learning how to drive it, not having my winter cover, and break in. I expect the truck to stay in the 8.8-9 range going forward, as the running average this year is at 8.9.
I have detailed my average load in other places. I run an average of 73k loaded weight, 17% empty miles, running AR, KS, and MO to the Northeast and Southeast, back to the Midwest and back to AR and run that loop repeatedly. It is common that I’m running back forth across 44 and 70 in MO ALOT, 76 and 80 in PA, Norfolk, VA South to Knoxville back to AR, up and down 81 repeatedly, I cross Monteagle several times a month when I’m running to Atlanta and going back North. Another common run is Norfolk North to Baltimore and across PA back to OH. I’m loaded down the majority of the time, running demanding routes in congested areas and kissing 9 mpg.
As a comparison the RunOnLess campaign averaged 10.1 mpg with an average gross of only 54k and some change.
As far as lugging it all the time, I think you should read my posts more carefully. I don’t lug all the time. It’s situational and part of momentum management. I don’t care about speed and I’m not using full power, not even close, even at 975-1000 rpm. Cruising at 1050-1150 rpm in a downsped Setup is not hurting anything. It’s just cruise, when power demand is lowest; once the load on the engine increases it will shift into direct to start performing work, not sit there at max load at 1000 rpm.
I didn’t mean to start an information war here but the truck makers have done a poor job in getting information out there regarding these kind of specs. What I’m doing or recommending is nothing new and there plenty of examples of fleets doing these things with great results. You just need to spend the time reading about it. I spent 7 months researching before hitting the dealers in my area to build what I wanted.
Agree to disagree I suppose.basedinMN_ Thanks this. -
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