2020RamSport
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Ram needs to offer the 3.55s with the Hemi!
AgreeRam needs to offer the 3.55s with the Hemi!
I have the 3.21 gears in my 2019 ram 1500 and they pull fine. My issue with the 3.21 gears is the ability of the truck to stay in overdrive doing down the highway when running over 55 mph. Anytime I go up a slight hill mine shifts out of 8 th gear sometimes down to 6 th gear. This hurts your gas mileage. My truck averages 14.8 to 15 mpg. One time got 16.3 but only because I stayed below 60 mph and was in no traffic.I hope this post will help to end the debate with facts and not opinions, and become THE post people refer to those who are having a hard time deciding.
You already know that 3.92 is better for towing, and 3.21 gets better fuel economy, so I will talk about what you might not know
Bottom line up front:
In layman's terms, to conceptualize the difference, imagine
1) 5 out the of 8 gears have the same final drive ratio between 3.21 and 3.92.
2) 3.21 has "an extra" overdrive gear.
3) 3.21 has 2 unique lower gears for towing.
4) 3.92 has 3 unique lower gears for towing.
5) Speed range that 3.21 is better at towing: 31-38 MPH, 48-57 MPH.
6) Speed range that 3.92 is better at towing: 0-30 MPH, 39-47MPH, 58-70 MPH.
Explanation
1) 5 out the of 8 gears have the same final drive ratio between 3.21 and 3.92:
Here's the gear ratio for the 8 speed transmission:
1) 4.71:1 2) 3.14:1 3) 2.10:1 4) 1.67:1 5) 1.29:1 6) 1.00:1 7) 0.84:1 8) 0.67:1 Reverse) 3.30:1
Final drive ratios with 3.21
1st. 15.12, 2nd. 10.10, 3rd. 6.74, 4th. 5.36, 5th. 4.14, 6th. 3.29, 7th. 2.70, 8th. 2.15, R 10.6
Final drive ratios with 3.92
1st. 18.46, 2nd. 12.31, 3rd. 8.23, 4th. 6.55, 5th. 5.06, 6th. 3.92, 7th. 3.21, 8th. 2.62, R 12.94
From the list below, we can see that gears 3-7 in 3.21 matches gears 4-8 in 3.92:
-- NO MATCH -- = 18.46 - 1st - 3.92
3.21 - 1st - 15.12 = -- NO MATCH --
-- NO MATCH -- = 12.31 - 2nd - 3.92
3.21 - 2nd - 10.1 = -- NO MATCH --
-- NO MATCH -- = 8.23 - 3rd - 3.92
3.21 - 3rd - 6.74 = 6.55 - 4th - 3.92
3.21 - 4th - 5.36 = 5.06 - 5th - 3.92
3.21 - 5th - 4.14 = 3.92 - 6th - 3.92
3.21 - 6th - 3.21 = 3.29 - 7th - 3.92
3.21 - 7th - 2.70 = 2.62 - 8th - 3.92
3.21 - 8th - 2.15 = -- NO MATCH --
2) 3.21 has "an extra" overdrive gear:
The 8th gear in 3.92 is the 7th gear in 3.21, thus effectively mean the 8th gear in the 3.21 is an extra gear to the 3.92.
Meaning, when you go test drive the 3.21 you will have to downshift to 7th to get the same acceleration at 3.92's 8th on freeways. That is why some people complain about how "sloppy" the 3.21 is, because the 3.21 has an extra overdrive gear for fuel economy. If you shift 3.21 in 7th gear, you will get the same acceleration as the 3.92 in 8th on the freeway. No, 3.21 isn't sloppy, you're just in a gear that 3.92 does not have.
3) 3.21 has 2 unique lower gears for towing:
As we know from 1), 5 gears have the same final drive ratio.
You "gain" an overdrive gear, but you "lose" one towing gear.
Here's the final drive ratio for the 2 towing gears.
1st. 15.12, 2nd. 10.10,
4) 3.92 has 3 unique lower gears for towing:
Same logic as the last
Final drive for 3 towing gears.
1st. 18.46, 2nd. 12.31, 3rd. 8.23.
5) Speed range where 3.21 is better at towing: 31-38 MPH, 48-57 MPH,
AND
6) Speed range where 3.92 is better at towing: 0-30 MPH, 39-47MPH, 58-70 MPH:
Calculated towing shift point to be 6000 rpm, if I'm off the logic is the same but the speed will vary.
For towing,
From the speed 0-30 MPH, 3.92 has higher final drive ratio over 3.21 (18.46 vs 15.12) until it has to shift to 2nd gear at 30MPH.
From the speed 31-38 MPH, 3.21 has higher final drive ratio over 3.92 (15.12 vs 12.31) until it has to shift to 2nd gear at 38MPH.
From the speed 39-47 MPH, 3.92 has higher final drive ratio over 3.21 (12.31 vs 10.10) until it has to shift to 3rd gear at 47 MPH.
From the speed 48-57 MPH, 3.21 has higher final drive ratio over 3.92 (10.10 vs 8.23) until it has to shift to 3rd gear at 57 MPH.
From the speed 58-70 MPH, 3.92 has higher final drive ratio over 3.21 (8.23 vs 6.74) until it has to shift to 4th gear at 70 MPH.
The key takeaway here is that towing heavier trailers uphill with 3.21 might never reach the desired speed within the 58-70 MPH range (typical highway towing speed) because 3.21 jumps from 10.10 to 6.74 without the 8.23 final drive ratio found in 3.92 that really help maintaining highway towing speed at max load.
Do you value the "extra" overdrive gear for fuel economy? or do you value the extra towing capability that you tell yourself you might one day need? That's up to you.
Indeed, surely people commenting is a good thing and it shows the OP that supplying the information has been a useful exercise. If it is after purchase then they have gained peace of mind in their choice and thats a positive outcome.Why would someone commenting on their choice - be considered an idiot?
Situations that require you to shift to 6th would require 3.92 to shift to 7th. However situations where it requires the 3.21 to shift to 8th, the 3.92 does not have the equivalent gear to match. It would be like 3.21 is stuck in 7th gear. Now, towing is another story, 3.92 is a must for towing over 8000lbs.I have the 3.21 gears in my 2019 ram 1500 and they pull fine. My issue with the 3.21 gears is the ability of the truck to stay in overdrive doing down the highway when running over 55 mph. Anytime I go up a slight hill mine shifts out of 8 th gear sometimes down to 6 th gear. This hurts your gas mileage. My truck averages 14.8 to 15 mpg. One time got 16.3 but only because I stayed below 60 mph and was in no traffic.
While that is all true mathematically, it feels like an oversimplification. We’d have to map the power curve of the engine against these gear ratios to fully understand how the “sweet spot” varies for each, and to truly understand where the necessary input force relative to the powerband requires a downshift. Make sense?Situations that require you to shift to 6th would require 3.92 to shift to 7th. However situations where it requires the 3.21 to shift to 8th, the 3.92 does not have the equivalent gear to match. It would be like 3.21 is stuck in 7th gear. Now, towing is another story, 3.92 is a must for towing over 8000lbs.
See I have been on other forums with most likely a younger demographic profile and refuse to get drawn into Keyboard hero stuff but others here I’m sure will continue.Indeed, surely people commenting is a good thing and it shows the OP that supplying the information has been a useful exercise. If it is after purchase then they have gained peace of mind in their choice and thats a positive outcome.
What makes sense is, it shifts to whichever gear the engineer programmed it to. Nobody knows if they’ve done the job right.While that is all true mathematically, it feels like an oversimplification. We’d have to map the power curve of the engine against these gear ratios to fully understand how the “sweet spot” varies for each, and to truly understand where the necessary input force relative to the powerband requires a downshift. Make sense?
True that!What makes sense is, it shifts to whichever gear the engineer programmed it to. Nobody knows if they’ve done the job right.
Been saying that for awhile. Coming from Ford awhile back I could have chosen 3.55 or 3.73, made more sense. Same gears debate over there, FCA/RAM just made it farther on the extremes By dropping the 3.55 for the hemi. Id rather they dropped the 3.21 but cafe standards dictated otherwise.Ram needs to offer the 3.55s with the Hemi!
That was one reason I chose the hemi over the 6. The Pentstar 3.55 eco seemed like it downshifted when there was any accelerator used, merging traffic, or a slight incline dropped gears. At least the 3.21 hemi had the tq to not change them on my test loop. Never tried the 3.92 since I had read a few of the gear war threads before and figured I’d suffer with the 3.21.I have the 3.21 gears in my 2019 ram 1500 and they pull fine. My issue with the 3.21 gears is the ability of the truck to stay in overdrive doing down the highway when running over 55 mph. Anytime I go up a slight hill mine shifts out of 8 th gear sometimes down to 6 th gear. This hurts your gas mileage. My truck averages 14.8 to 15 mpg. One time got 16.3 but only because I stayed below 60 mph and was in no traffic.