securityguy
Legendary member
I can't wait to see and drive these trucks!
My 3.5 Ecoboost was a beast when towing. It would put it up against any V8 out there including the 5.7 Hemi.
Ecoboost is not just 0-60.
I can tell you from personal experience my 3.5L Ecoboost pulled my boat WAY better than my 5.7L Hemi does.
Time will tell, a properly maintained turbo engine should last just a long as any normally aspirated engine. As long as it's not driven like it's in a drag race every day. There are lots of turbo Dodge cars from the 80s and early 90s still driving around with factory engine and turbos.No V8. No matter the HP the turbo can produce, it will never sound like a V8 truck. Plus the turbo is likely to be more problematic and naturally more expensive. These trucks are nearly outside the reach of normal everyday blue collar folks. I have no choice but to keep mine.
More or lessis this considered a mid-cycle refresh model?
is this considered a mid-cycle refresh model?
Hope this doesn't turn into the 2008 Magnum that were a one year only "refresh" before they killed the model.Yes, it's about 2 years late due to Covid, but officially mid-cycle, how long before the 6th gen is the question. I think this mid-cycle is weighted more towards the end instead of the middle of the 5th gen cycle.
Luckily its so mild from the outside and inside in terms of design, most people can't tell, especially on the Rebel trims. Heck, no metal work at all, everything inside and outside is pretty much bolt on updates.
Except of course the big change which is the exclusion of the Hemi for the Hurricane.
I would’ve liked to have seen sequential turbo chargers on the Hurricane.I find the 22 psi of boost on the SO and 26 psi on the HO a bit concerning. I realize they are built for it, but we'll have to wait to see how these hold up over time.
Tuned 3.5 ecoboost owners are generating 20 psi.
Even with twin turbos reviewers are complaining about some turbo lag.
I know of stock longblock LS3s getting pushed with over 30lbs of boost regularly at the track and hold up pretty well. As long as the time is safe, the boost level doesn't really make much difference.I was actually wrong on the 26 psi for the High Output Hurricane....it's 28 psi.
That's just a lot for 100,000+ miles.
I consider the Hellcat motor one of the best built motors for boost and they make 11 psi stock.
Well, I may catch heat for this but...the most underwhelming and quite frankly, disappointing "refreshes" I could have expected.
Exterior: At least they didn't completely destroy the looks. The Rebel now is just mild, at best. It used to be that when you saw a Rebel it screamed "wow, that's bold." Now? It looks like a half-Tundra, half-5th gen Ram. I'm sure it will look a little better with running boards and some of the other additional trim they put on. It will never be a true 5th gen Rebel though. The 4th gen to 5th gen Rebel was a homerun, if not a grand slam. The 4th gen Rebel's were aggressive as is. The 5th gens just made you go "woah." 6th gen is basically "Oh it's a standard limited/big horn/laramie with a black grill and sport hood."
Interior: Maybe the only bright spot? Passenger side dash looks cool with the screen but its me, only, in my truck 95% of the time. Big screen looks slightly reconfigured in terms of layout/display. Other than that? Meh.
Drivetrain: Mega, mega facepalm. The lack of a V8, even a mild/more-efficient one, is a huge blow. Turbo'd V6...good luck to anyone hoping to get 100k or more out of that motor without dropping some serious repair costs. Anyone getting one of these trucks: Get a 36k 3 year lease and give it the hell back if it doesn't start giving you problems. Even with the 5th gens, the 5.7 was still the 5.7. Yeah they have the longstanding lifter issues, the etorque caused some issues, but I'd rather take my chances with that than start scorching pistons, breaking internals, or having turbo's cook themselves.
I will probably keep my 2019 till it dies and pray they either a) Start putting V8's back in the 1500's, if not then b) go to another brand that still puts V8's in 1500 or c) move up to a 2500 which you have to imagine will still have a V8.
FYI.
It’s a Turbo Straight or I 6 in the new RAMs. SO and HO versions.
You can kiss the V8s goodbye in 1500 RAMs. That Genie isn’t going back in the bottle.