Willwork4truck
Spends too much time on here
I just would like RAM/FCA to address the lower rpm for Hp and Tq that Ford gets, in order to allow 1/2T users more towing ability. The reliability concerns over bearing lubrication etc. are a design issue as well as production. Regardless of the differences in motors, they need to do their homework for this "new" introduction.Apple's and oranges, you are comparing ford's diesel to an engine that will not be available in the 5th generation. The old turbo diesel numbers were boosted this year for use in the jeep. Even those numbers beat Ford's numbers. The new engine hosts a number of improvements.
The Ford and GM motor seem pretty well received on their forums. I'd just like FCA to keep abreast with or ahead of the competition.
The newest comparison I've seen is the Car and Driver article from 3 days ago:
How Does the Chevrolet Silverado's New Duramax Turbo-Diesel Engine Compare against Ford and Ram?
We look at the numbers: It's a dog-eat-dog truck world out there, and Chevrolet just took a big bite.

By ANDREW WENDLER
JUN 3, 2019
- Chevrolet has introduced a Duramax 3.0-liter inline-six diesel engine as an option for the 2020 Silverado 1500.
- This means all three competitors in the hotly contested half-ton-pickup segment—the others, of course, being the Ford F-150 and the Ram 1500—will offer a 3.0-liter six-cylinder turbo-diesel option in the 2020 model year.
- The new Chevy engine dominates in the numbers with its 277 horsepower and 460 lb-ft of torque.
The 2020 model year brings the arrival of the Chevrolet 1500 Duramax diesel, rounding out the trio of domestic entries into the segment. Don't confuse this new breed of six-cylinder diesel with the soot-belching beasts of old, however; all three of these new six-cylinder diesel engines employ loads of modern technology in terms of materials, assembly, and engine management, and in our experience they're dramatically less noisy and cleaner-burning than their predecessors.
Equal Displacement, Different Methods
Curiously, all three post comparable numbers but go about achieving them in distinctly different ways. They all have six cylinders, displace three liters, and employ turbocharging, but the new Chevrolet is an inline design while the Ram and the Ford are configured in a V format. Seeing as the truck wars are ultimately about comparing numbers, we've cut right to the chase and itemized the vitals in the chart below:
Chevrolet Duramax | Ford Power Stroke | Ram EcoDiesel | |
Displacement | 3.0 liter | 3.0 liter | 3.0 liter |
Configuration | Inline-6 | V-6 | V-6 |
Torque | 460 lb-ft @ 1500 rpm | 440 lb-ft @ 1750 rpm | 420 lb-ft @ 2000 rpm |
Horsepower | 277 hp @ 3750 rpm | 250 hp @ 3250 rpm | 240 hp @ 3600 rpm |
Block | Aluminum | Iron | Iron |
Head(s) | Aluminum | Aluminum | Aluminum |
Compression | 15.0:1 | 16.0:1 | 16.5:1 |
End of article cut and paste
The 460 foot pounds at 1500 is the target FCA should be aiming at...