I do not do tons of off road, but
3.36 with 11r22.5 and a 13 speed gives me 339 rpm at 1 mph for low gear. And i know that does pretty good and lets me shift up a decently steep hill maxed out on weight.
With his setup, looks like as long as hes using low low, same tires, that gives him 336 rpm at 1 mph. If short 22.5s.
While for heavy and steep starting speeds the bigger rpm number is better, 3 rpm difference doesnt seem that bad especially since his low range gears are closer together.
I could be wrong, as i said, dont do much off road
1999 N14 525hp rpm calculation check
Discussion in 'Heavy Duty Diesel Truck Mechanics Forum' started by Soon2BeOwnerOperator, Oct 4, 2023.
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While i dont think its terrible (see my previous post), its also not really the spec you see for most logging and off-road.
4.11s, 3.73s etc are way more common in those vocations. Theres probably a reason for it, so be aware that 2.85s even if they work fine, they may need a significant adjustment to driving styleSoon2BeOwnerOperator Thanks this. -
The point was, try to get a truck that is purpose built for the work it will be doing.skallagrime and singlescrewshaker Thank this. -
W923 and singlescrewshaker Thank this.
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Right on thanks for all the help and information. I will be mostly on highway but could see how in a logging situation it would not be ideal setup.
When I use to drive an 18 I rarely split the gears because they were so close together so I think I may like having a bit more of a power range and will end up using the gears more often.W923, singlescrewshaker and Oxbow Thank this.
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