doorfx
Active VIP Member
Isn’t Fiat/Chrysler now called Stellantis ?
I'm a Ford guy but I ride with a Dodge eco diesel owner. Pulls the 4 place trailer to Revy every 2 weeks and no issues. Lots of power to do the job and skimpy on fuel. If the air suspension was reliable it would handle a deck with 2 sleds up a hill no problem.What are we talking HD or those ****ty 1/2 ton diesel that cant even haul a sled deck up hill
HD truck or half tons??
-25c no problem at all without being plugged in.
IMO all three HD diesels are pretty good.
5w40 rotella, plug it in and a winter front, that’s all you need to know to owning a diesel in winter.
But I plan to camp in the middle of nowhere, so plug ins are not an option.
I don't even know where the block heater cord is on my 17 F350. 5-40 Rotella and it fires just as fast at -35 as +20. I laugh at you warm it up, Wabaso guys. I've got probably 1.5 million km in diesel pickup driving (all three brands) and think nothing of starting them cold and dropping them in gear and going. Yes, even at -35. I just drive easy at first. Never a problem. The GMs will actually warm up fast idling is you enable the elevated idle feature. The Ford and Dodge you are just wasting fuel and probably doing more harm. I do have an advantage in that I'm tall and can reach the whole windshield for clearing. Some have to let the defrost do the job.
Doing more harm letting them warm up? Ask ANY diesel mechanic about cold starting and warming up, or anyone who's seen a diesel torn down that was never warmed up and cold started all the time and you'll see the damage. Too much idling at low RPM is bad for newer diesels, but driving them ice cold is much much worse. There is no diesel out there that starts just as well at -35 as +20 if not plugged in, either you don't pay attention or need your hearing checked. They all sound like absolute chit starting at -35 not plugged in at first. The Ford at -35 is very very lucky if it will even start. Changes are you sell it before it shows the damage, or you've got very very lucky.
Doing more harm letting them warm up? Ask ANY diesel mechanic about cold starting and warming up, or anyone who's seen a diesel torn down that was never warmed up and cold started all the time and you'll see the damage. Too much idling at low RPM is bad for newer diesels, but driving them ice cold is much much worse. There is no diesel out there that starts just as well at -35 as +20 if not plugged in, either you don't pay attention or need your hearing checked. They all sound like absolute chit starting at -35 not plugged in at first. The Ford at -35 is very very lucky if it will even start. Changes are you sell it before it shows the damage, or you've got very very lucky.
Fun fact, since there appears to be some back and forth here... anyone with a newer Duramax who has had the block heater cord recall ... the ambient air temperature needs to be at 0F or -17C for the block heater to even initiate. Enjoy.
Well, not based on what my diesel tech at GM (not service desk people) explained to me. If its plugged in there is going to be activity on the meter I would think?? I wonder if there is power to it and a draw but it doesn't initiate until temp drops?
I wonder if diesel owners are possibly more passionate about their truck brand then how passionate they are about their sled brand?
.