Posted on 01/09/2008 9:50:29 AM PST by Incorrigible
That Camry might run 10 sec quarter miles once or twice if the drivetrain could hold, though.
I bought a 2001 Chevy Camaro V-6 thinking I would save on gas due to my long daily commute. I did spring for the Y87 performance package, but after looking more closely at the mileage and performance specs after buying, I found myself smacking myself in the forehead and saying “Wow! I coulda had a V-8!”
:)
Um... ever heard of the 4.6 and the rest of Ford’s Modular V8 lineup? They replaced the old V8s in the late 90s.
The old Ford V8s are long, long gone. The modulars are actually pretty good engines that sound awesome - and I am NOT a Ford fan.
Actually, I can see no reason why a 4-cyl turbodiesel couldn’t provide more than adequate performance in a light duty truck. Even many full-size heavy duty trucks only have a 6-cyl of 5 litres or so displacement.
How many miles do you have on that sporty 4-cylinder? And how much does it cost to keep it running?
Not exactly an every day driver, huh.
Oh, and by the way, you need to look at: The 03-04 Mustang Cobra, Ford Lightning pickup, the 05-up Mustang Shelby 500s - those are all blower V8s.
You never see the liberals suggest that the speed limit should be reduced to 55 mph for fuel economy and safety. While many of them think it, they don’t dare say it.
Timing belts are nice smooth feel to them no doubt.. but when you combine them with an interference engine design, your entire engines lifespan is tied to that thing failing.
That literally is the weakest point in the engine.. seems insane that any manufacturer would combine a timing belt with an interference design, but its made a come back in recent years to improve fuel economy and decrease engine size... At the very least use a chain when developing an inteference engine ... sigh.
Many of the truck makers are scrambling to make diesels for their 1500-class trucks now. GM has a 4.5L TD that should be out soon.
We *should* be seeing more diesels on the road shortly.
Those are superchargers (also called blowers and I think they've been around longer than turbo chargers.
My friend has that same car, and we’ve been busily modifying it. A bit of advice - put a Magnaflow exhaust on it, it will sound a LOT better. And I mean the entire manifold-back system, cats, X-pipe, and all.
You can pick up 20-50HP with that and a good tune.
4.5L? That’s still larger than *should* be necessary for adequate performance in a light-duty pickup. I’ve seen 20-ton straight trucks that were hauled around by an engine no bigger than that.
Yep! I loved that 300 in line 6. Great engine in a F-150 and you could actually work on it!
The 2009 Ford F-150 will likely offer one or maybe both of Ford’s new 5.8-liter and 6.2-liter BOSS V8 engines and perhaps Ford’s new 4.4-liter “Lion” V8 diesel.
The 4.4 Turbo Diesel V8 is based on the Lion V6 Diesel and has an estimated power output of 330 hp and 515 foot-pounds of torque. It will have a compacted graphite iron block due to its high power output.
The new pickup should hit the showroom floor at the January Detroit Auto Show and at dealerships come Spring of 2008.
Amen to that! I turned in my company-owned 1996 LS400 when I resigned that company a year ago. It had 240,000 miles on the odometer, did’t leak a drop of anything and got 23+ MPG on the highway.
And it was still f-a-s-t!
Nissan’s been shipping their V6s like that for years. They tell you to replace the belt every 60 or 105K (depending on generation) and they *never* break prematurely. The belt is usually actually good for 120-140K.
They did recently change to chain drive because of their variable valve timing and clearance issues.
Um, that’s what I said to the original guy that said that, if you’d read the entire post.
Amen, Brotehr.
I clearly remember the exact moment the timing belt on my Acura Integra snapped. There was a single moment (about 1/50th of a second, actually) where there was a universal ‘snapping’ sound of the valve stems being sheared off, then complete silence.
The beauty part was that the failure occurred within a mile of my destination after a 35 mile commute and directly in front of a full-service automotive repair shop.
In retrospect, that car was the best $9,000 and 200,000 miles I ever spent.
The Europeans and Japanese have smaller turbodiesels, but the 4.5 V8 is that size for low end torque and refinement - they’re thinking about putting the same engine in cars while they’re at it and they want to make sure diesel doesn’t have a performance penalty for their products (like it does over in Europe).
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