Does anyone want a Dodge diesel option?
#1
Does anyone want a Dodge diesel option?
Check out the prospects for a Dodge diesel:
https://dodgeforum.com/articles/2011...ustrynews.html
Does diesel have any use in something that's not a truck or a generator?
https://dodgeforum.com/articles/2011...ustrynews.html
Does diesel have any use in something that's not a truck or a generator?
#4
Diesel have a chemical efficiency of about 80% for fuel burned, gas only about 40% this is a no brainer. Hybrids are such a joke its unbelievable, up here it gets cold and they break all the time. The chemicals used in hybrids do more harm to the environment because of how they are mined and disposed of.
+1 on wheres the diesel 1/2ton?
+1 on wheres the diesel 1/2ton?
#5
i wouldnt mind desiel all that much but before they change that they need to get it in gear with there body designs what on earth happened to the durango? going from first gen ( i own) to second gen it looked like a minivan more than a suv? and then we now get the third gen which went a little more to the suv side but still the design is no were near as good as the first gen. i have noticed all manufacturers doing the same thing i dont want streamlined / luxury crap i want a truck with power that eats ricers for breakfast and looks / sounds like it too.
#6
I would buy one about 4 years after they come out, new car learning curve and all. Just hope that the diesel cars are built here, and are reliable in cold weather just like my CTD 3500. Just don't build them somewhere the temperature never gets below 60* F and expect the car to run flawless at -25* F.
sprntpshr
sprntpshr
#7
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#8
#9
Germany gets mighty cold and they have been making diesels for a very long time. Also, FIAT has been making diesels for their cars and commercial vehicles since the 60's. I doubt there would be a learning curve. Diesels are, by their nature, reliable and durable. I can only think of the converted Chevy 350 diesels when trying to recall bad diesel engines. In the cold, fuel gelling is the main problem and that has been solved with additives and heated tanks. The biggest problem I can see for diesels in cars and light truck applications is how efficient gas engines have become in the last 3-5 years. Do you really think it's worth 50¢ a gallon more for diesel engines if the mpg difference is only 2 or 3 mpg? I love diesels, I am(was) a diesel/heavy mechanics tech and I advocated for diesel engines for a long time. But the time of the diesel may be ending with the new efficiency of gas engines. There is torque benefits, but not so much as to make a big difference compared with modern gas engines. We will see a few smaller diesels, but it will not become common.
#10
Not to mention the higher maintenance cost. More filters and they usually hold more oil than a gas engine.
The EPA is also making it difficult with all of the BS that they choke them down with these days.
A Diesel Jetta in Europe gets 65mpg. By the time it gets to the states, it gets 45mpg. how dirty can it be at 65mpg that it needs to be regulated that bad??
The EPA is also making it difficult with all of the BS that they choke them down with these days.
A Diesel Jetta in Europe gets 65mpg. By the time it gets to the states, it gets 45mpg. how dirty can it be at 65mpg that it needs to be regulated that bad??