habu987
Stormageddon, Dark Lord of All
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2018
- Messages
- 556
- Reaction score
- 460
- Points
- 63
Ford uses a CGI block for its 2.7 EcoBoost and 6.7 PowerStroke, so looks like Ford, at least, has decided that a CGI block meets their cost-benefit ratio requirements. I don't see any reason why Ram couldn't follow their lead. Sure, there'd be costs associated with the switch from the regular cast iron, but that's a part of doing business. Side note, Audi also uses a CGI block for its formerly ubiquitous (outside the US, anyways) 3.0 TDI engine. I'm sure there are other non-exotic manufacturers that are using CGI blocks, but Audi and Ford are just the ones off the top of my head.I said nothing about engine failures, I'm uninterested in engaging that strawman.
The point I disagreed with, central to the whole idea of the above, is this:
"So engineers would look at CGI from a cost benefit ratio, with a bottom line question: would any increase in assembly, reliability, or serviceability offset the actual cost of production? "
which is, when boiled down to the simpler business question:
" CGI is expensive, is it worth doing?"
Well it looks like they're doing it, according to the people who run this site that you're on, and their well placed sources.
I'm not sure what you believe you're stabbing at, from what we know but they're going to CGI for cummins and it's up to you to figure out why they appear to be doing that very thing you said they weren't going to do.
Given the ever-increasing prices of trucks, I think Ram could figure out a way to introduce a CGI block in the 5.7 without adding undue cost increases.