Somebeach (Forum Supporter) said:
What years to look out for?
Is +100 horsepower really just a tuner away?
If not is there still cheap easy power to be had?
I've noticed, maybe diesels in general, to have low usable RPMs before redline vs gas how does this effect day to day driving? Does it seem like the transmission is shifting more often?
Is a gas truck wether dodge or GM a better truck if you aren't towing a lot.
Ealier 12v Cummins are dead nuts reliable. The really early ones had a VE pump that isn't quite as versatile. The later 12v trucks had the P7100 pump which is incredibly bulletproof and easily tuneable with a screwdriver and a piece of plywood. Not kidding, those are the actual tools you use. I had a 12v in a 26' box truck and I got tired of slow hills, so I stopped by the side of the road and five minutes later I had 50 more horsepower.
+100 hp is nothing. With the right parts and some internet solutions, how does +1000hp sound to you? Dad's duramax has bigger injectors, a lift pump, exhaust, and a tuner. It puts 938 ft-lb to the wheels for about a $2500 investment. Zero changes to daily driving, improved MPG, and wickedly fun. Getting sideways at 70 mph in a dually is fun. It's not uncommon to see Dmax or Cummins trucks putting out 2000 lb-ft and well over 1000 hp on basically stock rotating assemblies.
The thing about diesels is that they don't have throttles and they do (at least the ones we're talking about) have turbos. With a gas engine, you're chasing head flow characteristics, fuel trims, cam selection, exhaust selection, compression, etc so that everything matches. With a diesel, you add more fuel which spins more turbo which adds more air. Keep going until you run off the map with the turbo. Install bigger turbo and keep going. Making power with diesel is dirt simple.
Regarding low redline and shifting... they actually tend to shift less because the broadness of the torque curve means they don't have to. There is zero impact to driving characteristics. It's totally transparent. No different than switching from a 350 Chevy with a 5000 rpm redline to a Miata with a 7500 rpm redline. Redline is pretty easy to change as well on most of them. They don't need extra RPMs (and the slower burning of diesel means that you reach a point of diminishing returns) but if you plan on getting serious power, it's a simple offset cam in the governor of the pump in the case of the Cummins.
Regarding whether or not gas/diesel is the best choice for towing, you'll get eleventy quillion opinions on that. I'm a diesel lover, and towing with Dad's duramax or my 7.3 powerstroke is night and day. I can tow with my 5.3LS and get 10mpg, or tow the same thing with Dad's hopped up Dmax and get 18 mpg. I can top a mountian at the speed limit with my 5.3L or his Dmax, but the difference is I'm doing it by carefully timing my shifts and putting my foot to the floor in the 5.3L, or setting the cruise on his Dmax and it never goes past 1/4 throttle.
Be aware that with big torque comes big carnage. Dodge has two things against it in my book. Let's say you have a Cummins and a Powerstroke both making 480 lb-ft. The Cummins does it with an 80 ft-lb "hit" every 120 degrees. The powerstroke does it with a 60 lb-ft "hit" every 90 degrees. (that's not really how it works, but you get the idea) That, coupled with the fact that Dodge never really made a dedicated transmission designed to handle it and you get problems. They basically took an A518 and kept adding a stronger part here or there and called it a 46RE or 47RE, but it never had the clutch diameter or shell integrity to handle the vibes and the torque. It's still more or less an evolution of an old Torque-Flite from the 60s. In my years running transmission repair shops, not only did I see my fair share of insane carnage inside 47REs, I also noticed that the parts to rebuild them are far more expensive. I could rebuild a Ford 4R100 for $2200 or a GM 4L80E for $1800. One of the cheapest 47REs I did was more like $3600 for just a standard rebuild. Since they often broke additional parts, they could get really expensive.
Early P-pump 12v cummins is a good bet, but good luck finding one that isn't rusted or has 500k on it. The whole engine has basically three wires. Everything is mechanical and bulletproof. 24v cummins is still a fine choice, but right away you'll need to put a good lift pump in it. Factory lift pumps tend to die, and if the VP44 injection pump gets starved for just a moment, it's toast.
Dodge gets my nod for diesel engine, GM gets my nod for transmission (allison), and Ford gets my nod for overall fit/finish/build quality. My dream truck would be an F250 with a 12v cummins and an Allison transmission. Since a very close second favorite engine is the Dmax, I usually take the easy button and just get a GM and put up with the cheap interior quality and electrical gremlins. It's the same reason I now have a GM Van. It was my only way to get a full size AWD van and I just tolerate the foibles. But if Ford had offered an AWD van, I'd be driving an Econoline right now.
Just drive one or three and get a feel for yourself. Newer diesels (like post 2008 DPF or DEF equipped versions) can be nightmares, but the sweet spot of diesel greatness is somewhere in the 99-07 range. If I were shopping for a diesel truck right now, I'd be looking for an 05-07 LBZ/LLY duramax. If this site you're talking about has some not-wasted Dodges, I'd consider a P-pump 12v or a 24v with a better lift pump. I just really hate the Dodge part around the Cummins. Personal taste. Some people like them.