Silver said:I have a 2013 Lariat with that motor / tranny combination. This year I put 50,000 kms on it (90% + off highway) and the only glitch was an ABS sensor got disconnected in the mud I drive in. This truck has been standing up far better than my '10 Dodge diesel did under the same conditions.
The engine with Ford's "Dynamic Braking" actually holds back nearly as well as the diesel with the exhaust brake. My truck has the bucket seats with center console and is much more comfortable than the split bench I had in the Dodge. I suppose it does ride a bit rough, but is still an improvement over the Dodge.
Power I think is pretty good, 385 hp I think, but to take advantage of it you really have to have it wound right up, which is different after driving a diesel for so long. As far as mileage goes, it's terrible. Gets almost exactly what my Dodge gotIt will get about 15 mpg on flat dry pavement but I don't see much of that so it goes down from there.
Anyway, that's my two cents for what it's worth.
eatbeef said:Silver said:I have a 2013 Lariat with that motor / tranny combination. This year I put 50,000 kms on it (90% + off highway) and the only glitch was an ABS sensor got disconnected in the mud I drive in. This truck has been standing up far better than my '10 Dodge diesel did under the same conditions.
The engine with Ford's "Dynamic Braking" actually holds back nearly as well as the diesel with the exhaust brake. My truck has the bucket seats with center console and is much more comfortable than the split bench I had in the Dodge. I suppose it does ride a bit rough, but is still an improvement over the Dodge.
Power I think is pretty good, 385 hp I think, but to take advantage of it you really have to have it wound right up, which is different after driving a diesel for so long. As far as mileage goes, it's terrible. Gets almost exactly what my Dodge gotIt will get about 15 mpg on flat dry pavement but I don't see much of that so it goes down from there.
Anyway, that's my two cents for what it's worth.
How bad is terrible mileage? Been getting averaging 11 feeding, hauling, running to town. Will it do that?
Silver said:eatbeef said:Silver said:I have a 2013 Lariat with that motor / tranny combination. This year I put 50,000 kms on it (90% + off highway) and the only glitch was an ABS sensor got disconnected in the mud I drive in. This truck has been standing up far better than my '10 Dodge diesel did under the same conditions.
The engine with Ford's "Dynamic Braking" actually holds back nearly as well as the diesel with the exhaust brake. My truck has the bucket seats with center console and is much more comfortable than the split bench I had in the Dodge. I suppose it does ride a bit rough, but is still an improvement over the Dodge.
Power I think is pretty good, 385 hp I think, but to take advantage of it you really have to have it wound right up, which is different after driving a diesel for so long. As far as mileage goes, it's terrible. Gets almost exactly what my Dodge gotIt will get about 15 mpg on flat dry pavement but I don't see much of that so it goes down from there.
Anyway, that's my two cents for what it's worth.
How bad is terrible mileage? Been getting averaging 11 feeding, hauling, running to town. Will it do that?
That's about what I get running around bush roads, which are of course rough, hilly, winding, and often muddy. Hauling will be worse if you are in hilly country or hauling heavy loads I would think.
Faster horses said:Mr. FH LOVES, LOVES, LOVES his 2011 Dodge 1 ton 4x4 Dually.
However, it has the exhaust brake, installed at the factory. He doesn't like that it quits working too soon. He likes it to stay on til he is stopped. Has
anyone else noticed that? He always had them installed on any pickup
he owned since 2002, and they didn't work that way. He thinks the one
on the 2011 is a better brake, but it turns loose right at the end. :???:
Comments, please.
The '14 does the same thing. The 6 speed automatic downshifts once or twice on it's own going downhill with the exhaust brake on, when it's not necessary. If I want it to shift down, would like to be able to control it myself. Not to sound like a broken record, but to anyone interested, don't sell the Dodge's new rear suspension short.3 M L & C said:Faster horses said:Mr. FH LOVES, LOVES, LOVES his 2011 Dodge 1 ton 4x4 Dually.
However, it has the exhaust brake, installed at the factory. He doesn't like that it quits working too soon. He likes it to stay on til he is stopped. Has
anyone else noticed that? He always had them installed on any pickup
he owned since 2002, and they didn't work that way. He thinks the one
on the 2011 is a better brake, but it turns loose right at the end. :???:
Comments, please.
Mine is 2009 and it does that also works great down till about 25-30 mph then just quits.
eatbeef said:Comments or suggestions please, on the truck, motor, tranny, etc..... I am tired of dishing out at least 1000 every time I turn around on my 2006 F350 with 6.0 Powerstroke.
Faster horses said:Mr. FH LOVES, LOVES, LOVES his 2011 Dodge 1 ton 4x4 Dually.
However, it has the exhaust brake, installed at the factory. He doesn't like that it quits working too soon. He likes it to stay on til he is stopped. Has
anyone else noticed that? He always had them installed on any pickup
he owned since 2002, and they didn't work that way. He thinks the one
on the 2011 is a better brake, but it turns loose right at the end. :???:
Comments, please.
Sort of an update. Added fresh DEF and it seems to be regenerating without stumbling so much, besides you can't put a price on the warm and fuzzy feeling you get from saving the planet. :roll:Traveler said:We've got an '11 or '12 F250 (I forget) with that motor and tranny. No complaints except for the ride and the seats. I avoid using it as much as possible.
Got a '14 "Ram" with the coil rear springs, that rides much nicer and seems alright with a heavy load. Very poor low speed drivability during the exhaust regeneration/idling helicopter mode, though. Something must not be right, but too busy to take it back for a while. Sort of wishing it had the big gas engine instead. Fuel mileage is nothing spectacular in the first 3000 miles.
Good choice. Have a young couple employed that have a 6.0 with ~270,000 on it, not that they don't make enough to drive something freshereatbeef said:Well for better or worse I traded pickups. Got a 2012 Chevy 3500 WT, with a 6.0 gas, 4.10 rear, has 26000 miles on it. Drove it home today and got 10.4 driving into a 10-20 mph wind. Verdict is still out but I think there will be more pros than cons.