Sign In Join 



Cabover Campers & Camper Trailers (pickups) - READ ONLY

1377 messages,  Last post on Nov 20, 2003 at 1:43 PM

You are in the Pickups - Archived Discussions Forum. Your Host is kcram

This discussion is ARCHIVED. To reactivate the discussion, post a request in the Lost? Ask the Pickups Host for directions! discussion.

What is this discussion about? Truck

In addition to this subject, some of you may also be interested in
Pickup Bed Caps and Pickup Truck Accessories.
Post your messages about Cabover Campers & Camper Trailers below. Happy Motoring!


Messages Page 68 of 138
1
...
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
...
138
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

#670 of 1377
Vince by oltroll
Aug 17, 2001 (5:06 pm)
We live on Hatteras Island NC. It is about 60 miles long and maybe 2 1/2 miles wide at the widest point. Some places are only about 400 yards wide. We always make the weather channel this time of year. All the hurricanes head for us!!! The bridge is on the North end (about 5 miles long.) There is a ferry on the South end that takes about 45 minutes to reach the next Island--then another ferry (about 2 1/2 hours) to the mainland.
#671 of 1377
abc246 by vince4
Aug 18, 2001 (12:22 am)
Have you posted here before? If so I don't remember you, if not welcome.
 
First I'd say that your truck did amazingly well if you could maintain 65mph up hills in any gear. My 89 F250 with a 5.0 V8 couldn't do that up any moderately serious freeway hill (like 4%+). What type of camper do you have and do you know how much it weighs?
 
Your gas mileage is not surprising if you have a full size hard-side camper. As you know, the frontal area wind resistance is killer. Also, pushing the small engine hard drops the mileage down to the same or less than a larger engine would get. I get about the same mileage with my 6.0 Silverado that I did with the 5.0 Ford (~10mpg) even though I'm going faster now.
 
I agree that tow/haul works well. I always run with it on unless I'm in town where it is a little annoying. I don't think you can do anything about the lock up issue. When more power is needed the trans just wants to raise the RPM and dropping out of lock is the first step. I assume it needs to be out of lock to shift but I don't know for sure, does anyone know if an auto trans can shift while locked?
 
I very much disagree with the advice GM gave you. An aux transmission cooler is a great idea for your situation. Since you have to run at high RPM to get enough power, the trans is getting hotter than it would with a larger engine. My 2500 has a factory temperature guage and the highest trans temp I've ever seen was when I was holding speed up a hill in 2nd gear. I could see the gauge move as I climbed the hill. I've never seen it change so rapidly under any other condition, and my truck does have a factory aux cooler. Plus it's just good practice to have a cooler when you tow or carry a camper. The fluid temperature is the most important factor in transmission lifetime. You can add a cooler in a few hours for less than $100 which is pretty cheap insurance. You could plumb in an aftermarket gauge at the same time. All it needs is a sending unit in contact with the fluid and a 12V connection.
#672 of 1377
stabbur by vince4
Aug 18, 2001 (12:29 am)
Sorry to hear about your back problem but it's great that you were able to avoid surgery. The back and the eyes are areas where the success rate for surgery would make it a last resort for me.
 
That sounds like a nice trip. How do you get back to your truck when you canoe down a river?
#673 of 1377
Vince4 by abc246
Aug 18, 2001 (6:01 am)
It is a Nomad and weighs about 5000 lbs loaded. The newer engines have more power than the older ones. My V-6 has 200 hp at a low 4600 rpm and has about 210 ft/lbs torque avaliabe at just 1100 rpms! Not many V-8s did that a few years ago!
 
What was your trans temp climbing the hill in second? Over 280?
 
I'm not sure I agree with you that pusing a small engine is less efficinet than working a larger engine less. This goes against physics. Volumetric losses are less in the smaller engine. I will explain in detail if you would like.
#674 of 1377
Tow/Haul by oltroll
Aug 18, 2001 (1:38 pm)
During my two trips over the past few weeks I traveled over 5,000 miles. I tried the T/H a few times in the mountains and found the truck seemed to do better without it. It would stay in a lower gear more and longer than with it out thus higher RPMS and less gas millage. The mountains here in NC are much steeper than any of the others we went in (5 & 6 % for several miles.) My transmission never reached 200 (maybe 180). The highest I have seen it is about 190 in 4 wheel drive in really soft sand on a very hot day for several miles. A few times coming down the mountains I shifted down to 2 to keep from having to brake as much.
#675 of 1377
abc246 by vince4
Aug 19, 2001 (10:22 pm)
My transmission temperature never got very high, maybe 200 if I remember correctly. It's just that it changed noticeably from the bottom of the hill to the top. If it's anything like the engine temperature, it will hit a reasonable max and just stay. I've never seen the engine temp budge from normal under any condition.
 
You may be correct about the engine. With fuel injection and feedback controls it may be just as efficient at WO as normal and really be a function of displacement. I don't think that was true back in the carburetor days.
 
At 5000 lbs that is one heck of a load. Are you sure it's that heavy, even loaded? That would be way over my 2500's rating, I can't imagine what a 1/2 ton would do with such a load. The biggest Lance only comes in at around 3500 lbs. What suspension mods have you made?
#676 of 1377
T/H by vince4
Aug 19, 2001 (10:35 pm)
Sure it holds it in a lower gear, that's the point. Once the engine load is low enough for several seconds it will shift. I never use T/H without the camper, it just isn't needed. With your camper being so light for that truck you probably don't need it very often. One situation where it is helpful is climbing winding roads. It prevents an upshift every time you let up on the gas to enter a corner. That's an annoying feature of automatics.
#677 of 1377
Trans temp by abc246
Aug 20, 2001 (4:59 am)
It is a camper trailer. I think 5000 lbs would crush my half ton! It is only rated to hold 2000 lbs. Thanks for the trans temp info. My engine temp never moves either. It stays the same even in 100 degree heat, A/C on, and towing up hill foot to the floor. These trucks have excellent cooling systems.
#678 of 1377
Oh by vince4
Aug 20, 2001 (10:11 pm)
I see now. I get confused when people refer to trailers as campers. I guess that's why campers are usually referred to as "truck camper" or "slide-in camper."
 
If you told me you were carrying a 5000 camper I'd ask for a picture because that would be a sight to see! Did you happen to see the picture making its way around the web a year ago or so of a grossly overloaded Volkswagen Jetta? It had about 3000 lbs of Home Depot lumber on top and died in the parking lot when the shocks came up through the sheet metal. It was a great picture. I'll try to find it just for fun.
#679 of 1377
Here it is by vince4
Aug 20, 2001 (10:21 pm)
I found several copies of that picture and story. I guess it's an internet legend now.

http://ideageek.com/wow/


Messages Page 68 of 138
1
...
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
...
138
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

New? Join Now!

Forum Tools

Please sign in.
Email Address:

Password:

Forgot Password?

Search Forums

Enter Keyword(s)

Advanced Search

Browse by Vehicle



View All Vehicles
Advertisement
Ask the Community
See What People Are Asking

Browse by Board

Browse by Topic


View All Topics

Today's Chats

Advertisement