AnnDee4444
Well-Known Member
These were taken from dyno charts. I would NOT trust them to be accurate in the lower rev range, especially at idle speeds.
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Power output is meaningless at idle speeds anyway. Anytime you need power, you push on the throttle and you're well into the meat of the power on any engine. Being that these are all autos (aside from the weakest of the bunch in some JLs), it really doesn't matter if the peak power is at 2500 or 5500, it will downshift enough to get you there nearly instantaneously. The narrow power band of the diesel just means much quicker up shifts as you gain speed.These were taken from dyno charts. I would NOT trust them to be accurate in the lower rev range, especially at idle speeds.
In one breath the diesel is the same as the 392.Thanks! It's really interesting that the 392 and the 3.0TD are almost perfectly aligned, in both torque and horsepower, from idle to 3,000rpms.
Note that the 3.0TD delivers the most power of any Wrangler engine in the rpm range where we drive the vast majority of the time. It was really the absolute perfect engine for a Wrangler: power, where it's needed, and fuel economy. And...it did both effortlessly.
Unfortunately my short-hop driving patterns took me through a DPF every 24 months - under warranty of course.
Different tools for different jobs. Lifelong muscle car/muscle Jeep guy for fun. Career diesel driver for work. ā¦. Sure, diesels are great for workhorses, heck, the newer ones got ~8 mpg hauling ~80K lbs. ā¦In one breath the diesel is the same as the 392.
In the very next breath, the diesel has the best power???
HUH???
For me, I drive between idle and 3,000 when I am relaxed and just chill.
When I am, yahoo, I am 3,000 to redline. Let me see the diesel do that! The diesel falls on its face when the 392 comes alive.
Here is what the diesel is good for, and it barely broke idle doing it. The quiet/confident muscle leads to drama-free ease. I'm loving my 392, but if the 392 tried this you could hear it in the next county.In one breath the diesel is the same as the 392.
In the very next breath, the diesel has the best power???
HUH???
For me, I drive between idle and 3,000 when I am relaxed and just chill.
When I am, yahoo, I am 3,000 to redline. Let me see the diesel do that! The diesel falls on its face when the 392 comes alive.
Dude, what kind of stress did your driveline endureHere is what the diesel is good for, and it barely broke idle doing it. The quiet/confident muscle leads to drama-free ease. I'm loving my 392, but if the 392 tried this you could hear it in the next county.
Watch starting at 1:30.
That said, the 392 is (much) more fun above 3,000 rpms, but you have to admit this feat is impressive.
Just to be clear, this is not me. I live in hot, dry Phoenix, where we hardly ever have 80,000 lb semis stuck in the snowDude, what kind of stress did your driveline endureI guess at least you had some good ambient temperatures helping keep your transmission beating.
Diesels are some funny buggers, I have a 26 hp Kubota that thinks itās a Bradley Fighting Vehicle.
Gotcha, I wondered considering your username.Just to be clear, this is not me. I live in hot, dry Phoenix, where we hardly ever have 80,000 lb semis stuck in the snow.
I just stumbled across the video on YouTube.
You weren't as far off as you'd think: while Phoenix is consistently warm, the coldest temperature ever recorded in Arizona is MINUS 40 (Hawley Lake on January 7, 1971).Gotcha, I wondered considering your username.