- Location
- Southern Indiana
Specs on the Dmax?
Yeah but the payment downgrade is always welcome....
My cushy burb costs less than my electric bill every month![]()
Specs on the Dmax?
what are you getting next?
I loved towing with my Burb. 12ish MPG towing my ZJ with the 6.5L and a place to sleep. I couldn't justify spending $4-5 a gallon on diesel for a DD, and I missed having a pickup bed so it got replaced.
Cps?
Everyone makes this statement, but I don't understand it.
On the way to work this morning, gas $3.39 a gallon and diesel $3.99 a gallon.
My truck has a 29 gallon tank. I put 26 gallons in it every two weeks (400 miles or so) if I'm driving it everyday to work.
26 x 3.39 is $88.14 and 26 x $3.99 is $103.74. I spend $15.60 more to fill up with diesel. If I fill it up every two weeks for a year (stay with me here), then that's 26 x $15.60 = $405.60 a year more for diesel.
Now, that only works if I'm getting the same mileage. I average 15.5 mpg daily in my diesel. If I get 2 mpg less than that, I pay the same for gas even though gas is cheaper. 26 x 13.5 mpg is 351 miles. That's 87% of the miles I get with 26 gallons of diesel at $103.74. A fill up of gas compared to diesel is 84% of the cost of a diesel fill up.
At the end of the day, there's nothing more expensive about putting fuel in a diesel. The maintenance and the initial cost of the vehicle is what gets you. But if you're strictly comparing the price per gallon, it's a wash. You're not getting the same mileage out of your gas 3/4 or 1 ton truck that you are out of a diesel.
I know my math isn't exact, but you get the point.
It would figure that Photobucket is down when I want to post a pic of Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy...Feeling good, Josh!
I offer you a truce...:smoker:When I have to fill it up my chest hurts a little bit...
yes it is, I couldn't get to 4th, pulled that bastard in 3rd on the governor doing 35. No overheating though.mac 'the hill out of Harlan is a mofo and you have to do it from a dead stop' gyvr
Everyone makes this statement, but I don't understand it.
On the way to work this morning, gas $3.39 a gallon and diesel $3.99 a gallon.
My truck has a 29 gallon tank. I put 26 gallons in it every two weeks (400 miles or so) if I'm driving it everyday to work.
26 x 3.39 is $88.14 and 26 x $3.99 is $103.74. I spend $15.60 more to fill up with diesel. If I fill it up every two weeks for a year (stay with me here), then that's 26 x $15.60 = $405.60 a year more for diesel.
Now, that only works if I'm getting the same mileage. I average 15.5 mpg daily in my diesel. If I get 2 mpg less than that, I pay the same for gas even though gas is cheaper. 26 x 13.5 mpg is 351 miles. That's 87% of the miles I get with 26 gallons of diesel at $103.74. A fill up of gas compared to diesel is 84% of the cost of a diesel fill up.
At the end of the day, there's nothing more expensive about putting fuel in a diesel. The maintenance and the initial cost of the vehicle is what gets you. But if you're strictly comparing the price per gallon, it's a wash. You're not getting the same mileage out of your gas 3/4 or 1 ton truck that you are out of a diesel.
I know my math isn't exact, but you get the point.
a train leaving Detroit loaded with gas powered pick up trucks is headed towards Florida, how much diesel does it require to generate electricity needed to transport them to Minneapolis?
Not a lot, frickin' diesel electric trains get like 500 mpg.
yes it is, I couldn't get to 4th, pulled that bastard in 3rd on the governor doing 35. No overheating though.
a train leaving Detroit loaded with gas powered pick up trucks is headed towards Florida, how much diesel does it require to generate electricity needed to transport them to Minneapolis?
Not a lot, frickin' diesel electric trains get like 500 mpg.
Of course if I didn't try to pull 70 up those hills it would run cooler also...