- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Whats tOB’s thoughts on a F-250 7.3 gasser?
Posted on 9/12/22 at 9:52 pm to thejudge
Posted on 9/12/22 at 9:52 pm to thejudge
With 4.30 gears and the 6r100 trans it REALLY shines. All around fantastic drivetrain for real normal 3/4 ton truck use.
A bunch of these 3/4 tons you see driving around are either overloaded hauling 38' 5th wheel toy haulers or just about never pull anything. In reality, diesel 3/4 tons make very little to no practical sense. If you NEED a diesel, you likely NEED a dually. If you need a 3/4 ton, but don't need a 1 ton, you're likely far better served with a gasser than a diesel.
A bunch of these 3/4 tons you see driving around are either overloaded hauling 38' 5th wheel toy haulers or just about never pull anything. In reality, diesel 3/4 tons make very little to no practical sense. If you NEED a diesel, you likely NEED a dually. If you need a 3/4 ton, but don't need a 1 ton, you're likely far better served with a gasser than a diesel.
Posted on 9/12/22 at 9:58 pm to DownshiftAndFloorIt
I feel 1,000% attacked.
My 18’ aluminum boat needs a 6.7 with 880lbs of tq to get us to Fred’s Saturday mornings.
My 18’ aluminum boat needs a 6.7 with 880lbs of tq to get us to Fred’s Saturday mornings.
Posted on 9/12/22 at 10:04 pm to DownshiftAndFloorIt
All of what Downshift said and also the 7.3L is a very heavily built up engine designed for use as a hauler from the get go. CGI block, heavily reinforced, forged crank, high volume/pressure oil pump and oil cooler. It also has tons of power left on the table if anyone decided 430/475 wasn't enough, every bit as responsive to bolt-on parts and tuning as the LS engines.
Posted on 9/12/22 at 10:17 pm to Ice Cream Sammich
Some people just like pissing away mountains of money.
You could just buy a gasser and get the 6.7 door badge and exhaust tips and still get the aftermarket rims and 37's. You could still dick flex on the poors and spend more on your wife's ykon Denali.
You could just buy a gasser and get the 6.7 door badge and exhaust tips and still get the aftermarket rims and 37's. You could still dick flex on the poors and spend more on your wife's ykon Denali.
Posted on 9/12/22 at 10:53 pm to Uncle JackD
I hear good things on the 7.3. Gas engines these day are on par with diesels 15-20 years ago….which at that power output, is about the niche for 3/4 ton trucks. Anything bigger you’ll need to step up.
I have the 6.2 gasser in 3/4 ton for the farm, love it. That 3,000+lbs payload capacity is hard to beat in a 2500.
I have the 6.2 gasser in 3/4 ton for the farm, love it. That 3,000+lbs payload capacity is hard to beat in a 2500.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 6:11 am to Junky
This has come up a bunch lately I can only share my observations...
I needed a way to pull a gooseneck to move my two larger tractors around so I upgraded to a GMC 2500 Diesel last year. I absolutely love the truck, it's the first one I have had in a while I truly love. I can pull a 105 HP tractor and batwing on my gooseneck and it doesn't miss a beat on hills and it stops it very well. The power between it and anything else I have driven previous (which is granted limited in the bigger trucks) is amazing. If my truck gave up the ghost today I would go right back and get another diesel I have enjoyed it's capabilities, it's been quite the eye opener.
I needed a way to pull a gooseneck to move my two larger tractors around so I upgraded to a GMC 2500 Diesel last year. I absolutely love the truck, it's the first one I have had in a while I truly love. I can pull a 105 HP tractor and batwing on my gooseneck and it doesn't miss a beat on hills and it stops it very well. The power between it and anything else I have driven previous (which is granted limited in the bigger trucks) is amazing. If my truck gave up the ghost today I would go right back and get another diesel I have enjoyed it's capabilities, it's been quite the eye opener.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 6:26 am to Da Hammer
I’m in the same boat as Hammer. I had a 14 Chevy 2500 with the 6.0 gas. I did not enjoy the truck at all. The constant down shifting and revving up (I know that’s where the power is) got old.
I traded it on a 17 F250 with the 6.7
It’s been a great truck and handles my tractor , 5th wheel , and a small bulldozer without any issues . I’ll give this one to my 13 yr old in a couple years and likely buy a dually when we upgrade to a slightly larger dozer. I don’t see me going back to a gas truck for any heavy towing.
I traded it on a 17 F250 with the 6.7
It’s been a great truck and handles my tractor , 5th wheel , and a small bulldozer without any issues . I’ll give this one to my 13 yr old in a couple years and likely buy a dually when we upgrade to a slightly larger dozer. I don’t see me going back to a gas truck for any heavy towing.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 8:42 am to Uncle JackD
I ordered a 2020 CCSB 7.3 XLT with 4.30's. No suspension mods, tires are 1" taller than stock. No engine mods other than Magnaflow exhaust.
Love this truck more than any I have ever had before.
I'm in 3 different trucks weekly. I drive an old Toyota to work and while on the clock I drive a leveled 2019 deleted/high-tuned 6.7 CCSB. Yea, the deleted 6.7 is a race car on 35" mud tires but I wouldn't spend my own money on it.
Back to my personal 7.3. Half the miles on it are with a trailer attached. That could be 3k to 27k lbs. Running mileage from purchase is 12 mpg. On an open highway trip unloaded it gets 17 mpg.
IMHO if you aren't "rich", and the truck will not constantly be pulling over 15k lbs, the diesels aren't worth it these days.
Especially for someone that can't work on new diesels and lives in flat lands like us.
The 2020 on 6.7's with 10 speeds have had 2 different transmission recalls. Luckily for me, none of the 7.3 transmissions have had one. If you look at a used 10 speed with a 6.7, do your research.
Love this truck more than any I have ever had before.
I'm in 3 different trucks weekly. I drive an old Toyota to work and while on the clock I drive a leveled 2019 deleted/high-tuned 6.7 CCSB. Yea, the deleted 6.7 is a race car on 35" mud tires but I wouldn't spend my own money on it.
Back to my personal 7.3. Half the miles on it are with a trailer attached. That could be 3k to 27k lbs. Running mileage from purchase is 12 mpg. On an open highway trip unloaded it gets 17 mpg.
IMHO if you aren't "rich", and the truck will not constantly be pulling over 15k lbs, the diesels aren't worth it these days.
Especially for someone that can't work on new diesels and lives in flat lands like us.
The 2020 on 6.7's with 10 speeds have had 2 different transmission recalls. Luckily for me, none of the 7.3 transmissions have had one. If you look at a used 10 speed with a 6.7, do your research.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:00 am to pdubya76
The 6.0 is a fabulously reliable engine but definitely won't win any power awards. The new 6.6 and the Ford 7.3 are big improvements in the power and pulling aspects.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:04 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
quote:Exactly. The pin weight is around 2400# on the 5th wheel I’m eyeing.
does not take much tongue weight to overload a 3/4 ton diesel.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:21 am to Uncle JackD
there is only one Ford 7.3 and it aint a gasser
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:27 am to Uncle JackD
Most people don't think about payload capacity at all, and it is poo garbage on any 3/4 ton diesel.
If you're bent on a diesel get a 1 ton srw at minimum, and a dually is WAYYYY better. Otherwise, get a gasser. Its a better package.
If you're bent on a diesel get a 1 ton srw at minimum, and a dually is WAYYYY better. Otherwise, get a gasser. Its a better package.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:33 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
If my numbers are right, the payload on a crew cab 250 with 7.3 is 3500#. That’ll leave me over 1000# for cargo, I think that’ll be plenty.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:46 am to Sam Quint
quote:You mean International, baw.
there is only one Ford 7.3 and it aint a gasser
Posted on 9/13/22 at 9:54 am to Uncle JackD
quote:
If my numbers are right, the payload on a crew cab 250 with 7.3 is 3500#. That’ll leave me over 1000# for cargo, I think that’ll be plenty.
Don't listen to the weight police.
You will be fine. Those numbers don't mean much. If you order a F250 with max load springs it will have a higher "number" than a F350 with a derate.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 10:00 am to White Bear
quote:
You mean International, baw.
ok fair.
Posted on 9/13/22 at 12:37 pm to 44Bogger
quote:
Don't listen to the weight police.
quote:
Those numbers don't mean much
Do you really want someone to wreck an overloaded truck in 2022 in America???? Is your name Gordon McKernon?
A regular 3/4 ton CAN haul 50k with 5k lbs of tongue weight, but that doesn't mean anyone should. Making what you already have work is one thing, but to go out and buy something that might end up overloaded is just stupid.
If you need a 3/4 ton get a gas, and if you need a 1 ton get a diesel dually. This is not complicated.
This post was edited on 9/13/22 at 12:40 pm
Posted on 9/13/22 at 1:53 pm to DownshiftAndFloorIt
07 Dodge 6.7 here and will be updating in ~2 year range. Does the new 7.3 and tranny combo do well holding speed coming off mountain passes/ grades?
Posted on 9/13/22 at 4:05 pm to Wraytex
holding speed coming off mountain passes/ grades?
This is where diesels REALLY shine. The 6.7 cummins can provide over 250 braking horsepower and no gas engine will ever be able to come near that.
That said, odds are the 7.3 does better than any other gas engine. With a gasser, displacement = engine braking. Just don't expect diesel performance from it.
This is where diesels REALLY shine. The 6.7 cummins can provide over 250 braking horsepower and no gas engine will ever be able to come near that.
That said, odds are the 7.3 does better than any other gas engine. With a gasser, displacement = engine braking. Just don't expect diesel performance from it.
Posted on 9/14/22 at 9:06 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
Thanks, I can't put a price tag on that safety feature of towing back from the mountains. I don't think the wife likes hearing the brake talk it's way down a 6+ winding grade for miles but it's music to my ears.
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News