jejb
Military
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2020
- Posts
- 1,854
- Reaction score
- 1,838
- Location
- NW Arkansas
- Ram Year
- 2022
- Engine
- 6.7 Cummins
I disagree. A good example of it is in post #13 of this thread. But a lot of that can depend on fuel prices in your area too. Oil/fuel filter changes are pricey on the diesel, but they only need to be done once a year or every 15K. If you are a DIYer and drive 15k+ a year, that can be a wash.Diesel will cost you more. That is a fact and isn't debatable.
Gas motors can have meltdowns too. But the vast majority will not have to replace either motor.You MIGHT break even if you have no failures for the duration of ownership, and keep it a long time. One failure and you've lost any chance of coming out ahead. One major failure, and you've come out wayyyyy in the red. You can put a new engine in a gas truck for what a fuel system job on the diesel costs.
Maybe in a fleet situation, that might be correct. I have seen diesels in local fleets, like HVAC businesses.Fleets are running gas trucks for a reason. It's cheaper. It's cheaper to buy and cheaper to operate. OP is well within the capabilities of an HD gas truck and if the decision is strictly based on Financials, the diesel never wins in any scenario.
No question. I'm not debating which engine the OP should get. Good arguments for both.The gas truck will drag that trailer wherever he wants to go for however long he's willing to pump gas into it.
You spend that on the original option, but again, you're going to get pretty much all of that back at sale/trade time. I wish the rest of the truck held its value as well as the diesel motors does!With a diesel, you're spending a lot of money to be able to smoke up passes and keep your foot off the brake going down. Nothing wrong with that, but realize that is what you're really spending the 10-12k on.
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