First The Silverado, Then the F-150 & Now the New Ram 1500 FAILS the TFL Towing Torture Test!

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @TFLtruck
    @TFLtruck  28 дней назад +20

    Save up to $1,300 on a Ford or Mopar (RAM, Jeep, Dodge, Chrysler, Fiat) extended factory warranty for your new vehicle at Granger Motors!
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    • @stevenpeterson7234
      @stevenpeterson7234 28 дней назад +3

      So TFL when are you gonna do that test with a Nissan Titan XD 5.6 V8? I bet it would stomp it with ease!!

    • @BamaTidefan1967
      @BamaTidefan1967 26 дней назад +5

      @@stevenpeterson7234 Why would they do a test with a discontinued vehicle?

    • @007Knightjp
      @007Knightjp 25 дней назад +3

      0w20 is too thin for that much heat.

    • @stevenpeterson7234
      @stevenpeterson7234 25 дней назад +2

      @@BamaTidefan1967
      It's not gonna be discontinued. It's just a marketing scheme

    • @BamaTidefan1967
      @BamaTidefan1967 24 дня назад +1

      @@stevenpeterson7234 Why would they need a marketing scheme for a vehicle that doesn't sell? They only sold 10,550 Titans all of last year. Just for comparison Ford sells that many F150's in five days.

  • @christophernoe5367
    @christophernoe5367 28 дней назад +1722

    The low oil pressure is likely due to the oil being thin from so much heat, but when revved up, the oil pump is able to maintain pressure. At the end of the test while the oil was cooked, and you idled down, the low rpm wasnt able to create the necessary oil pressure with the cooked oil.

    • @blueheelerfriend8450
      @blueheelerfriend8450 28 дней назад +69

      most likely the case imo too

    • @zinc466
      @zinc466 28 дней назад +106

      To be fair dodge had problems with the hemi due to a lack of oil at idle for the lifters. Dodge loves the weak oil pumps.

    • @JNatella
      @JNatella 28 дней назад +147

      There was still pressure reading, it was just set below the warning level, which looks like they set it to 20lbs from the factory. Oil temps were only reading I think 235 in the test... seems like someone screwed up spec'ing that oil weight from the factory. Another compromise made in the name of chasing fuel efficiency numbers maybe? I would hope not

    • @itsmee8102
      @itsmee8102 28 дней назад +132

      Use a thicker oil and it’d probably be fine. It’s a symptom of too thin an oil with very high temperatures resulting in basically not enough viscosity to maintain oil pressure.

    • @gavinhassett479
      @gavinhassett479 28 дней назад +46

      Same thing is destroying the 3.0 ecodiesel engines. Perhaps someone can explain the variable pressure/volume oil pumps that they are using today... designed for optimum fuel economy, but not for the bearing longevity.

  • @DJ2226
    @DJ2226 28 дней назад +913

    Low oil pressure and no dipstick make me cringe. 😬Screw a sensor, I want to see the levels with my own eyes.

    • @youngblood23rb
      @youngblood23rb 28 дней назад +21

      Bingo

    • @a1e20
      @a1e20 28 дней назад +20

      If my Freightliner didn't have an engine oil dipstick, I'd turn in my CDL right now. Hell, I'd turn in my damn license completely.

    • @slscamg
      @slscamg 28 дней назад +15

      I have two cars without a dipstick so I’ve gotten used to just trusting the sensor and knock on wood, it’s been fine. But but I 100% agree with you on is that was nowhere near enough oil pressure for high RPM maximum output. Even 3.6 in my jeep output 78 psi at anything over 3500 rpms. I’m guessing the oil was so thin being 0w-20 there wasn’t enough volume available from the oil pump to get that pressure high enough

    • @qdog494
      @qdog494 28 дней назад +29

      Exactly. It feels like Stellantis doesn’t understand what truck guys want. Give me the oil dip stick and get rid of the damn knob

    • @omardevonlittle3817
      @omardevonlittle3817 28 дней назад +12

      ​@@qdog494truck guys don't get a new one every 3rd year.. they don't care about you

  • @Misnjef
    @Misnjef 27 дней назад +41

    The fact these guys didn’t know what was happening with the hot oil kinda reduces the credibility of this channel

    • @hoofhearted304
      @hoofhearted304 7 дней назад +7

      They’re towing a skid steer with a half ton. Lmao

    • @eblamo
      @eblamo 6 дней назад +2

      They had no dips tick because RAM doesn't think owners need to check it themselves. Their sensors never fail, so people need to just trust them, their dealers, & dealer service departments.

    • @GrumpyBigZ
      @GrumpyBigZ 3 дня назад +1

      Definitely not rocket scientist.

    • @williamburtjr.8730
      @williamburtjr.8730 2 дня назад

      Junk

    • @TheLolgee
      @TheLolgee 2 дня назад

      I think it makes it more realistic. Many buyers will just trust what the manufacturers state and do what these guys did.

  • @trucker1375
    @trucker1375 24 дня назад +111

    Tfl has been testing and beating trucks for years. I can't believe they didn't understand that when extremely hot, oil thins out. That was the cause of low oil pressure light. Once it gets back to normal operation temperatures the oil will get its viscosity back. Oil breaks down, its what it does. Light went out minutes after it came on, temperatures dropped. Come on tfl you guys should know this. I give ram a gold medal and 5 stars for its performance on this test.

    • @jetdriver
      @jetdriver 23 дня назад +18

      Ok you’re right that oil thins out when it’s hot. But you can’t give a vehicle 5 stars when the factory oil spec thins out so much at a within limit temp that you get a low oil pressure light.

    • @trackpackgt877
      @trackpackgt877 23 дня назад +7

      ​@@jetdriveryou're absolutely right they recommend to thin of oil for cafe fuel efficiency standards because they don't care if the motor only lasts 100,000 Mi versus 200,000 the manufacturer is not worried about longevity

    • @peterpizzurro9410
      @peterpizzurro9410 23 дня назад +9

      So you're rewarding the truck for not being able to be properly used as a truck? GTFOH

    • @adventuremonkey9613
      @adventuremonkey9613 23 дня назад +7

      High oil temp = lower pressure

    • @car2069
      @car2069 22 дня назад +10

      They are so clueless. It boggles the mind.

  • @sHoRtBuSseR
    @sHoRtBuSseR 27 дней назад +9

    I wouldnt fail it. I am a Chrysler tech and minimum oil pressure is way less than 20. It's like 7 psi or something. I can't remember now.
    The light on the dash comes on early to prevent neglectful owners from murdering their engine.

  • @billygoat7c
    @billygoat7c 28 дней назад +554

    It's just hot, oil is thinned out from the heat, when you stopped, the rpms dropped and pressure reduced. I'd bet the manual says to run a heavier weight oil for the conditions you are operating in. My Ford's manual does.

    • @luigy0491
      @luigy0491 28 дней назад +69

      This guy gets it 👆

    • @ryanfrancis7264
      @ryanfrancis7264 28 дней назад +24

      Yup! Not to mention, the 3.6 pentastar uses a 2 stage oil pump that drops the pressure significantly at lower RPM......this new engine could as well.

    • @explor360
      @explor360 28 дней назад +20

      That’s why I run a 5W-30 full synthetic instead of the 0W-20 in my Gladiator. I’ve seen 245 oil temp while running heavy uphill at highway speeds for 20 minutes at a time. Plus I live where it never gets below about 10 degrees so no need to go to a 0 W oil.

    • @bjornironsides6474
      @bjornironsides6474 28 дней назад +21

      Given it went right back off, this seems correct. Stopping after heavy duty work or track racing is never recommended. Cars like a little cool off period at modest rpms, then idle for a couple mins, then shut down. Got to let those fluids flow and cool.

    • @Floreypottery
      @Floreypottery 28 дней назад +6

      Yep doesn’t help some of the manufacturers run thinner oil now even on heavy trucks

  • @legalsan3913
    @legalsan3913 28 дней назад +259

    You should do a follow onto this video. Drain the oil and install 5W-30 and run the exact same test as close as possible.

    • @davidporter7051
      @davidporter7051 28 дней назад +3

      why would a human hair's width make much of a difference?

    • @Mdan7
      @Mdan7 28 дней назад +30

      @@davidporter7051HTHS oil rating is everything for this type of test. A Euro 5W-30 with a 3.5 HTHS rating, would make this issue go away under same conditions.

    • @davidporter7051
      @davidporter7051 28 дней назад +10

      @@Mdan7 it will not make it stay away. It may provide a cushion but the problem is cooling and manufactures cheaped out on coolers about a decade ago to save a few bucks per unit.

    • @kelvinmann1058
      @kelvinmann1058 28 дней назад +25

      According to our local Ram service tech, running anything but 0w20 will void the warranty. I asked, that was the answer I got.

    • @wakawaka5131
      @wakawaka5131 28 дней назад +33

      @@kelvinmann1058 ...so essentially they are saying run it with water so it breaks and we can gouge you to fix it.....

  • @legalsan3913
    @legalsan3913 28 дней назад +33

    I would call that a win for this Ram. The oil viscosity that manufactures are recommending is just too thin thanks to the EPA, especially in a high workload environment. I would just run a 30 wt oil in it if it was mine. Stellantis, if you are listening , stop being so cheap and install an oil dipstick. This is a work truck for goodness sakes.

  • @DennisSpurlock-nl8en
    @DennisSpurlock-nl8en 24 дня назад +22

    Test all the half ton pickups with the same trailer weight, then it would be a good comparison. Having the RAM tow 3,000 lb more than the Chevy is not a valid comparison between the two trucks.

    • @BigstockGamingINC
      @BigstockGamingINC 20 дней назад +2

      This

    • @Napster60
      @Napster60 14 дней назад

      So.. What do you want? Heavier weight on the Chevy? Or less weight on the Ram? and how would that change the outcome?

    • @maddogs1989
      @maddogs1989 10 дней назад

      I mean the Chevy failed with 3,000lbs less. The Ford was doing 10,000lbs

  • @alanpilibosian1979
    @alanpilibosian1979 27 дней назад +111

    I'm not a RAM fan but I think the truck finished the task and was parked before it gave a warning. I think it passed. C'mon Roman! Give it some respect!

    • @JacobMoy-ij5om
      @JacobMoy-ij5om 22 дня назад +3

      Yes, my thoughts exactly

    • @hotlightning9496
      @hotlightning9496 20 дней назад +4

      Dude it still failed lol doesn’t matter when

    • @alanpilibosian1979
      @alanpilibosian1979 20 дней назад +17

      @@hotlightning9496 The Ram never reduced power like the others. It also never told them to shut it down. 20 psi is plenty of oil pressure for an engine to not get damaged at idle. Is it ideal? Not in Rams opinion but I was taught that 10 psi per 1,000 RPM is sufficient so there is plenty of safety factor at 20. Should you be alerted so you can check things out to make sure they are ok? Absolutely. Plus it came back above 20 very quickly. The Ford (my favorite) warned them AND reduced power AND THEN told them to shut it down because it was getting critically hot. I don't like that the Ram outdid the Ford and Chevy in this test but it did. Let me explain it like this: If 3 people run a 100 yard dash and one guy has a heart attack half way (Ford), another guy pulls a hammy 3/4 of the way (Chevy) and the other guy crosses the finish line but his shoe is untied (Ram), you're gonna disqualify the guy who crossed the finish line? Or this: I just noticed that one of my tires failed. It's only at 34 psi while the others are at 35. Do I need to continue?

    • @muskiefishing9219
      @muskiefishing9219 10 дней назад

      No respect here, when Auto manufacturers start doing dump stuff. Like taking away dependability, by putting everything electronic. So the average person cannot work on his own vehicle. And putting control fetchers into a vehicle. People need to take a stand and not buy these vehicles. People need to start putting demands on auto makers. for what we want and expect in a vehicle. The first thing is, pickup trucks can and should be getting 60 plus miles per gallon with V8'S. And Not the crap they're making now. We have the technologies to get 60 plus miles per gallon. They have had these technologies since the 1970s. Auto manufacturers are being treated not to release this technology. We have had technologies to go green for decades. We are dealing with a bunch of hypocrisy. We want stuff that we can maintain ourselves. And not have to bring to a certified mechanic shop every time we need something done. That's delicious. How is a person supposed to change the engine oil or transmission fluid. When there are no dipsticks. Or how are you supposed to know how much oil is in the engine when the electric oil gage fails. Which it will. A Gage will never tell you what the dipstick can.

    • @chadsteele1
      @chadsteele1 6 дней назад

      Two more seconds it would failed. It's a fail. Sorry dodge fan boy. Get over it

  • @DanielJaegerFilms
    @DanielJaegerFilms 28 дней назад +218

    Towing capacities are like bank loans. Just because you can doesn’t mean you should.

    • @jefflarsson4824
      @jefflarsson4824 26 дней назад +16

      It's also the frequency. If you max it out once or twice a year, fine. But if you plan to tow that kind of wieght often, you should look at a bigger truck.

    • @NBSV1
      @NBSV1 26 дней назад +6

      They keep raising the tow ratings because marketing. You should be able to tow rated capacity without issue. But, because people think a higher rating means the truck is stronger they set it high.
      Set that rating at about 8,000lbs and that truck would probably be much happier.

    • @danielcox3983
      @danielcox3983 23 дня назад +3

      The problem is these trucks aren't designed to work at 100% capacity at all times. I wouldn't run my equipment at max capacity at all times, I'd rather find a comfortable amount of overhead to increase reliability but that can lead to efficiency reductions so yeah.

    • @Kevin-ti3rz
      @Kevin-ti3rz 17 дней назад +1

      It used to be the other way . The tow rating was lower than what the truck could do . Now it's just a sales tactic.

    • @twosencefromcleveland6084
      @twosencefromcleveland6084 16 дней назад +1

      @@NBSV1 Yeeeaah, but how many guys would tow a skid steer; or any other piece of equipment up THAT road with a 1500?

  • @mertz313
    @mertz313 28 дней назад +459

    Its interesting how all 3 had different issues.
    Ford overheated the oil
    Gm overheated the transmission
    Ram popped a low oil light
    Do Tundra next

    • @omaribarra4777
      @omaribarra4777 28 дней назад +162

      Ford overheated the oil
      Gm overheated the transmission
      Ram popped a low oil light
      Tundra blew the engine 😂

    • @MrRiftman
      @MrRiftman 28 дней назад +42

      Ford overheated the oil
      Gm overheated the transmission
      Ram popped a low oil light
      Tundra let loose the magic smoke

    • @SuperZpowell
      @SuperZpowell 28 дней назад +10

      @@EGGINFOOLSYou are correct oil was hot but it was the coolant temp that caused the engine to pull power.

    • @rubbermaidable
      @rubbermaidable 28 дней назад +22

      If GM would take the damn transmission thermostat out it wouldn't overheat.

    • @Enchanted3DPrints
      @Enchanted3DPrints 28 дней назад +6

      Id hate for them to see what Ive put my 2019 Tundra through 😬. Even without a trans cooler 🙄

  • @MSchumacherfan
    @MSchumacherfan 28 дней назад +436

    Thinner oil caused by manufacturers trying to meet government mpg goals

    • @kuhndog-1196
      @kuhndog-1196 28 дней назад +37

      It's not only that. It's also really tight tolerances from the bearings and journals. Got to have thinner oil to make it between those components. Add sustained heat into that already thin oil, and your asking for issues.

    • @eddiehuff7366
      @eddiehuff7366 28 дней назад +4

      Yes, I was thinking the same thing.

    • @SteveUTubesucks
      @SteveUTubesucks 28 дней назад

      @@kuhndog-1196 As a polite and well-intentioned FYI, you are referring to *clearances*, not "tolerances*. Tolerance refers to the range of acceptable sizes to which a part must be manufactured (ex: a main bearing made to Ø2.002 max / 2.000 min), while clearance refers to the resulting space between mating parts (ex: the crank journal and the aforementioned bearing).

    • @bjornironsides6474
      @bjornironsides6474 28 дней назад +5

      @@kuhndog-1196 This is when I wonder, unless manufacturer states it in the manual, that when people suggest heavier weights when it isn't called for completely ignore engineering tolerances in the engine and oil pumps (numbers they don't know). Bubba mechanics saying use "this brand in weight" Nope, I'm using what it says to use.

    • @kuhndog-1196
      @kuhndog-1196 28 дней назад

      @bjornironsides6474 absolutely. If I put 5w30 in my 6.4 power wagon that calls for 0w40, it would kill it. Older rigs it's not a big deal. I mean I could run 15w 30 in my 73 dodge without issue.

  • @workshopnut
    @workshopnut 27 дней назад +150

    I’m no big fan of Ram, especially when I heard the no oil dipstick thing, but that was not a fail. That thin, hot oil was the reason it threw a low oil pressure warning. As soon as it cooled down a bit, it recovered.

    • @BloodAlwaysFindsItsLevel
      @BloodAlwaysFindsItsLevel 27 дней назад +6

      Exactly.

    • @adamsmiths3016
      @adamsmiths3016 25 дней назад +7

      Still a fail my 2013 has never done this even towing heavy. Failed hard.

    • @johnpeters9793
      @johnpeters9793 25 дней назад +7

      @adamsmiths3016
      You have no clue if your '13 has "done this"...

    • @adamsmiths3016
      @adamsmiths3016 25 дней назад +1

      @@johnpeters9793 you have no clue what my 13 has towed you idgit.

    • @adamsmiths3016
      @adamsmiths3016 25 дней назад +2

      @@johnpeters9793 come to my area of the US and you'll see that this type of towing is a normal thing. Maybe get some more life experiences before you speak.

  • @b1pig
    @b1pig 27 дней назад +39

    I'm NOT inclined to call that a fail. There was never a warning that the vehicle was going to fail all the way to the top. Once stopped, a low oil pressure warning was seen... and this was the first time the truck went to idle. Parked. Made it. Done. Never had to stop, slow down or alter plans. Idle will produce the lowest oil pressure... and when it alerted, it seemed to only go 1 or 2 psi below the "normal" range.... and as stated when it sat idle for a few minutes, the pressure came back up and the warning went away. I agree that there is NO reason to remove dip sticks from engines. None. I see it as another means of preventing us from maintaining our own machines. That has little to do with the pass/fail of the test. I think you did make a valuable find in this case, though. Ram needs to bring a few of their own test rigs out to your area and test in a similar condition to see what results they get. BTW.... I am curious to know if you guys went and got an oil change after that run. If not.... you really should. Well done. Keep at it.

    • @johnsechrest1880
      @johnsechrest1880 22 дня назад +1

      I agree. I call that run the first successful one and I am a Ford man but do recognize a good engine when I see it. I am quite impressed with this new motor. Would have never bought the so called "Hemi" but I would buy this one.

    • @bpl0807
      @bpl0807 19 дней назад +1

      I do agree that it made it and accomplished at the task but it did fail to adequately cool the engine oil, this is a huge issue in terms of longevity when actually used to its full capability. Impressive nonetheless but still, a noteworthy flaw was identified here.

    • @Moonless6491
      @Moonless6491 19 дней назад

      shouldn't have any issues or warning lights every time you test the capability.

  • @JustinKingOffroad
    @JustinKingOffroad 28 дней назад +177

    Nobody torture tests like TFL!! Manufacturers should take notes.

    • @AaronVanNoy
      @AaronVanNoy 28 дней назад +3

      I’m loving these videos!

    • @r.holdaway5839
      @r.holdaway5839 28 дней назад +5

      They do an awesome job. Not sure I’d purchase this truck/engine combo.

    • @freedomisnotnegotiable
      @freedomisnotnegotiable 28 дней назад +1

      Iam currently on a 5000mile roundtrip from MO to CA. We are on our way back home. I drive a Hyundai Palisade with 7 kids (we squeeze 4 in the second row, 3 in the back) I tow a 5000 lbs travel trailer. We went over Tioga pass (10.000ft) and climbed 3 times in one day over 5000 ft driving through Death Valley at 115-120F outside temperature, so far absolutely no issue, the temperature needle never really moved, I did turn off the Air condition for 10minutes on one of the crazy Death Valley climbs, not sure if I needed but wanted to be safe since there is no cell phone and barely any other cars driving. So far Iam absolute impressed, even towing uphill with 35-40 it can do it at 3000 rpm.
      Thursday we will also cross the one gauntlet but I don’t expect any issues considering what we done already

    • @EfiLiveLB7
      @EfiLiveLB7 28 дней назад

      Absolutely

    • @dundonrl
      @dundonrl 28 дней назад +3

      Nah, Northwest Loggers make those "torture tests" anemic. I've seen heavy duty pickups being used to help 80000 lb log trucks being pulled up steep hills on gravel!

  • @0isbrabra0in
    @0isbrabra0in 28 дней назад +53

    @22:30 heat coming from the truck means the cooling is working properly to expel the heat. Low oil is def just a low viscosity oil for the usage and only becuaer you went to idle to it indicate so. Add some rpms and watch the low oil pressure light go away. Also, oil pressure vs oil level are different

  • @joshualewis393
    @joshualewis393 28 дней назад +316

    Gotta love that manufacturers take away the physical dip stick and you have to rely on the digitial dipstick. Just something else to fail and something they can charge the consumer more for when we dont want it.

    • @JohnConrad
      @JohnConrad 28 дней назад +30

      They do this shit on purpose, slowly making vehicles more disposable and less serviceable 😢

    • @amritk5173
      @amritk5173 28 дней назад +9

      BMWs have been doing it this way very reliably for the last 2 decades. I don't agree with the system but it's really not that bad reliability wise. Just extra steps to see how much oil is in the engine.

    • @joshualewis393
      @joshualewis393 28 дней назад

      @@amritk5173 You think it's reliable but if the reading accurate? I had a 135i and that was my first and only experience with this.
      But if I want to check my oil. I HAVE to drive 10-15 minutes. I cannot just open the hood and physically check it. Same thing for changing the oil, I have to drive to get a reading.
      Plus in the BMW, it would always say full. It costs more money for manufacturers to incorporate this instead of leaving alone what has worked for decades upon decades.

    • @donleamon8653
      @donleamon8653 28 дней назад +4

      Bet it has to do with emissions and keeping the crankcase environment better sealed.

    • @GTOGregory
      @GTOGregory 28 дней назад +3

      @@donleamon8653 My 2024 3500 Silverado Allison ten-speed transmission doesn't have a dip stick.

  • @RCMServices
    @RCMServices 27 дней назад +59

    The thing about this test is that, I have never seen anyone towing a skid steer with a 1/2 ton truck.

    • @jaycampbell5167
      @jaycampbell5167 25 дней назад +6

      I have seen a few and I’ve pulled one out of a snow bank with the old s10 blazer zr2

    • @elpoison626
      @elpoison626 25 дней назад +4

      Jajaja those dudes are out there believe me

    • @stephengregory1655
      @stephengregory1655 24 дня назад +9

      You'd flip if I told you I pulled a Mobile home, not an RV, a Mobile home, a half mile down my property line with a 4cyl 1996 Ford Ranger... And we got up to like 15 to 20 mph in that thing at times

    • @jeffhall768
      @jeffhall768 24 дня назад +5

      I've seen it. Plenty of small business guys do it because f150s are so much cheaper than a 1 ton diesel and it'll pull it...for a while 😂

    • @williammorgan5987
      @williammorgan5987 24 дня назад +2

      1/2 ton trucks are basically cars, 3/4 ton trucks are where trucks start. Chevy and Ford 1 tons are HD trucks and the Ram 1 tons are tractors. But that might change in 2025, they’re ditching the commercial transmission for a single engine and transmission option for the whole class so it will either be great or just same playing field as the others with the economy and power numbers game.

  • @timpeterson2738
    @timpeterson2738 24 дня назад +9

    My dad had a 1972 ford with a straight 6, had half a million km on it. He pulled the engine and 3 speed tranny to make a 8" grinder used to grind half frozen 50 to 80 lb blocks of frozen fish for mink feed. That engine never died, nor the tranny.

    • @wildbill23c
      @wildbill23c 22 дня назад +2

      It also wasn't turbo-charged. These underpowered/undersized turbo engines aren't gonna hold up long, and with all the electronics today it'll be a tossup which fails first electronics or engines.

  • @1967elad
    @1967elad 28 дней назад +17

    As someone who lives in Arizona, I appreciate this test. Getting out of the valley to escape the summer heat is 7% grade with 115 degrees sometimes higher. I see a lot of ALL brands on the side with hoods open with trailers attached.

    • @wildbill23c
      @wildbill23c 22 дня назад +2

      Seen that all the time with newer trucks on the sides of the highway, can't remember which pass it is now, but overheating was a major problem with newer trucks on that pass, my old F250 never batted an eye at steep hills....the 460 never struggled, only struggle it had was passing by a gas station without needing a drink LOL.

  • @helipro2245
    @helipro2245 28 дней назад +54

    Remember running 10W-40 in the summer ? The good old days ….

    • @franknedobity2757
      @franknedobity2757 27 дней назад +5

      I remember the days of 10w40 being a sludge making combination back in the day. Quaker state was the worst. Pulling valve covers to find caked carbon sludge in a bunt cake shape of the valve cover.

    • @xxxxtripxxxxOSG
      @xxxxtripxxxxOSG 27 дней назад +4

      ​@franknedobity2757 I remember my dad helping a friend pull a 318 out of a Dodge Ram van that was absolutely caked up with sludge. He said that is what happens when you use Quaker oil, it turns to Quaker oats.

    • @deplorableredneck4.02
      @deplorableredneck4.02 22 дня назад +3

      I hate the 5-20 stuff especially for this kind of heat..my 75 harley I would run 70 weight if it was really hot. But most of the time 50 weight

  • @enjoytomorrowtoday
    @enjoytomorrowtoday 28 дней назад +97

    It didn't get a low oil pressure until you started idling. Tho oil is much thinner when it's hot. So while you were still driving, the oil pump was turning faster, ergo more pressure. As soon as the oil temp started to drop, your oil pressure came back up. Just kick up your idle for a few minutes after you stop. You need to let the turbos cool off anyways before you stop the engine. I'd call it a win.

    • @JohnConrad
      @JohnConrad 28 дней назад +9

      If this is a win, I’ll keep being a loser in my 2016 Tundra that will likely outlast this

    • @joebalser9921
      @joebalser9921 28 дней назад +5

      @@JohnConrad it beat the crap out of the other two. I've been undera tundra or two and wouldn't touch one doing my job in the woods. The garbage they have hanging all over the place under there is just a disaster waiting to tear the guts out after you get off the road cupcake. And you are limited to lifts and such because they're only slightly upgradable. I like Toyota too, but they haven't made a good truck in ages

    • @thatoneguy335
      @thatoneguy335 28 дней назад +1

      The hurricane doesn’t require the turbos to be idled down I believe.

    • @adamriale9065
      @adamriale9065 28 дней назад +3

      It was under 40lb of pressure at the beginning of the test and steady decreased throughout the pull.

    • @enjoytomorrowtoday
      @enjoytomorrowtoday 28 дней назад +8

      ​@thatoneguy335, maybe not, but after coming up that hill, I wound still let it cool down if I was going to shut it off.

  • @lyndonhamby7432
    @lyndonhamby7432 27 дней назад +10

    The Ram ZF trans is hard to beat 👍🏻💪🏻

  • @ericfromflorida5146
    @ericfromflorida5146 24 дня назад +6

    I'd call that a success. High engine /oil temp = lower viscosity and thus lower oil pressure for a given RPM. So if I were working my truck like this, I'd definitely put a slightly higher viscosity oil in it. But as I said above, given how all the other trucks did, and this truck still HAD oil pressure, it was just low, I'd definitely call this a win!!! Now if the darn engine only had a dip stick.🤷

  • @crowdsurfpp2192
    @crowdsurfpp2192 28 дней назад +40

    Hot, low viscosity, oil gets you low oil pressure at idle…. Oil is still moving but it’s water “thin”. It will self resolve.

    • @NOXStellans
      @NOXStellans 28 дней назад +2

      Would a different oil grade for the summer help? Being in Colorado, one might actually need to change oil grades with the seasons?

    • @crowdsurfpp2192
      @crowdsurfpp2192 28 дней назад +5

      @@NOXStellans will definitely help. The only caveat would be the new hurricanes sensitivity to the thicker oil at low temp. Tolerances with small passageways with bearing feed and turbo feed can sometimes create starvation/ cavitation.

    • @Pesmog
      @Pesmog 28 дней назад +3

      Yes, I have seen this many times on race car engines. Give it a few revs and the problem disappears, but very hot oil at idle will on some vehicles show very low pressures.

  • @wh33lhousediecast
    @wh33lhousediecast 28 дней назад +9

    It crossed the finish line with no warning...a win is win lol

  • @shoefly757
    @shoefly757 27 дней назад +9

    I have 13,2xx miles on my 25' 1500 with the standard output 3.0. We took a trip pulling our enclosed race trailer (20' 6600lbs +/-) within the first 300 miles of ownership and I loved everything about it except the oil pressure being at 23-25 psi at idle. I figured its due to the barely thicker than water oil from the factory. So i switched to Pennzoil ultra platinum 5w30 at 6000 miles and just did my second at 12,000 miles. Oil pressure is up around 3-5 psi higher and makes me feel a littler better inside. I've only ever owner ford diesels and ecoboost and this is my first dodge, very happy with my purchase.

    • @truckguy6.7
      @truckguy6.7 22 дня назад +1

      Considering the rams with the 5.7 liter engine where bullet proof with the exception of inadequate oiling at low rpms which caused premature failure of the valve train. An easy fix with software, limited idle and replacing the oil pump with one out of the hellcat motors. You think Ram should have learned from that.
      The inline is a butter smooth engine. Hoping it turns out to be reliable.

    • @shoefly757
      @shoefly757 22 дня назад

      @truckguy6.7 I had my doubts, but so far so good. Just finished our 5th trip with the race trailer today, little over 1000 miles. Avg 9.6 mpg, highest temps were 225 coolant, 187 tranny, and 224 oil, which was running 75mph through the mountains of WV at 86F ambient.

  • @daveteddersr.1935
    @daveteddersr.1935 26 дней назад +7

    As a heavy equipment mechanic for 45 years i can safely say all oil thins out as it gets hot and oil pressure will go down when this happens. Im sure if it got to low it would derate engine or stop it. Best of luck and Thanks.

  • @andyharman3022
    @andyharman3022 26 дней назад +29

    Major fail for GM. 275F transmission temperature towing only 7000 lbs. The Ram did a lot better, especially considering it was towing 50% higher weight with an engine half the size. Oil temperature at idle dropped below their low threshold after 15 minutes of heating it. I don't think that's a major problem. The engine didn't shut itself down. Oil thins out continuously with increasing temperature and the combination of low viscosity at idle speed caused the oil pressure to drop. If you had revved the engine slightly, the oil pressure would have increased and the low pressure alarm would have gone away. After the oil temperature decreased a few degrees, the low pressure alarm went away by itself. If the engine has a variable-displacement oil pump, maybe Ram needs to change its calibration to increase pump displacement oil at high temperature. 232F is not a dangerous oil temperature.

    • @terrelltiller5710
      @terrelltiller5710 21 день назад +1

      Sounds like another Dodge guy crying that the oil that Dodge says it needs Dodge still sucks. It should’ve been gone in the 80s except for Lee Ayoka so let’s put an industrial engine in there. That’s the only thing to save Dodge or we wouldn’t have it anymore.

    • @andyharman3022
      @andyharman3022 21 день назад

      @@terrelltiller5710 Lee Iacocca.

    • @xxcrazy_critr6661
      @xxcrazy_critr6661 19 дней назад +1

      @@terrelltiller5710 There is definitely truth in this, I remember it well. Dodge was just about dead until after 1993-1994, then it suddenly became the latest and greatest thing, because Lee Iacocca.

    • @James-rk6go
      @James-rk6go 15 дней назад

      Dodge? 🗑️ RAM? 🚮

  • @woody4u247
    @woody4u247 28 дней назад +49

    Roman is wrong, That wasn't a failure & it never derated like the other two, The low oil pressure warning was caused by high oil temperatures thinning out the viscosity of the oil as it passes thru the oil pump & sensor. that's normal. think about pancake syrup... at normal temperatures it's thick but flows.. if it's heated up, it's thin & runny.... Oil acts the same way. you can see once it idled for a minute, it cooled a little & the warning went away. the reason it didn't go off still pulling was the oil pump was pump was running faster because of engine rpm & airflow. once they stopped, oil pump slowed down & pressure dropped from lower rpm, happens at any temperature & is normal. it was right after the hard pull and airflow stopped, so there was still high ambient heat radiating but no airflow. Ram actually passed the test... It was also pulling 3,000lbs more weight than the Chevy and 10 degrees hotter air temperature.... the ford/chevy was 90 the ram started at 100(97) and pulled more weight, hotter day & maintained engine & tranny temperature the whole way. The super heated oil thinned out but maintained the whole drive.... then a short warning & it cooled itself off quickly.... Roman is also incorrect, low oil pressure & oil level are Not the same or connected. since ram foolishly went to a level sensor, thats different... but.. 99.8% of vehicles use a light or guage to measure oil PRESSURE... not level... if you had a 6 qt system, you could be 4 quarts low & the light/guage will not show that. it only measures oil going thru the pump allowing it to build pressure to distribute it... no oil, no oil to pump= no pressure... you can still have full pressure and still be VERY low on oil....... Ram, Still a Pass. well done.

    • @gol10dr45
      @gol10dr45 28 дней назад +2

      I 100% agree

    • @21divel
      @21divel 27 дней назад

      The Ford didn't derate I don't think. It only set a temp warning. The Chevy on the other hand needed to stop.

    • @jamesevans20
      @jamesevans20 27 дней назад

      good workout Guys !

    • @NoName-ml5yk
      @NoName-ml5yk 26 дней назад +5

      Are you a ram fan boy by chance. Low oil pressure when towing well under the rated tow capacity while running the factory recommended oil is a fail every day of the week. Just because the motor still sounds fine doesn't mean that the bearings weren't wiped. They need to do an oil analysis.

    • @kona5853
      @kona5853 25 дней назад +1

      @@NoName-ml5yk”use the factory recommended oil” is key for a job like the one they are embarked upon, which requires a thicker viscosity, not the oil recommended for epa approval for sale off the lot. Also they appeared to be running the rpm’s too low when the light went on. I’m a professional driver and that will happen to almost every truck when you do a hot run up a mountain with too low viscosity oil for the job and immediately drop to idle, at best that is a operator error not knowing the truck. When doing a hot pulls always keep rpm’s consistent until the oil cools and when running automatics sometimes it is necessary to manual override your shifts.

  • @ckiely27
    @ckiely27 28 дней назад +38

    So look in the manual and I will bet they have a different weight oil for severe duty ie towing if the normal for none severe duty is 0w-20 I’ll bet they go to 5w-30 for severe duty or some variation like that

    • @Turshin
      @Turshin 28 дней назад +7

      This comment needs to be pinned.

    • @philipparana9225
      @philipparana9225 28 дней назад +1

      Hurricane uses 0 w40 it's turbom

    • @otm646
      @otm646 25 дней назад

      ​@@philipparana9225There are two different specifications. The standard output uses 0w20 the high output is 0w40

  • @Phantom0309
    @Phantom0309 28 дней назад +149

    Oil viscosity reduces as oil temp increases, perhaps engine was not able to produce enough oil pressure at idle and hence the warning

    • @kylepassmore5317
      @kylepassmore5317 28 дней назад

      Beat me to it.

    • @skunkworks9-3
      @skunkworks9-3 28 дней назад +17

      Exactly. Throw some 5w30 in and let that tug run it again. The 0w20 or less these manufacturers run now is to thin in hot conditions.

    • @mikiplavin1424
      @mikiplavin1424 28 дней назад +3

      I also agree, and my guess is that the manufacturers put 0w20 oil in these modern engines , which is very thin oil to begin with.

    • @Turshin
      @Turshin 28 дней назад +11

      That's exactly what happened. Especially since the light went away almost immediately when the truck just sat to idle. I call this a win.

    • @lp6wo
      @lp6wo 28 дней назад +1

      @@Turshinagree 100% and I bet Ram tells them the same thing.

  • @afrojack5263
    @afrojack5263 27 дней назад +6

    How could you call it a fail? The Ram ran that shit perfect he just got really thirsty after finishing

  • @nickjeffery2419
    @nickjeffery2419 26 дней назад +4

    The excess heat will reduce the viscosity of the oil. When the viscosity of a fluid reduces it requires more work from the oil pump to achieve the same pressure. This is why when the motor idled it dropped below the low oil pressure limit. As the oil cooled and viscosity increased, the oil pump was then able to achieved the desired pressure.
    Finally get to use that engineering degree for something cool

  • @WeSRT4
    @WeSRT4 28 дней назад +27

    0w20 oil heated up to the point to where it thinned and caused low oil pressure. If it were my truck I would dump the factory 0w20 early on and change to a high quality synthetic 5w30.

    • @selfcarefordudes
      @selfcarefordudes 28 дней назад +4

      Yep, same with the Hemi. All it needs is more lube. 5w30 takes away any tick.

    • @MountainPF
      @MountainPF 28 дней назад +1

      The 0w-40 may be better.

  • @ib516
    @ib516 28 дней назад +40

    The low oil pressure is from the 0w20 oil being very hot and thinning out.

    • @danlewis3605
      @danlewis3605 28 дней назад +3

      I bet Mobil 1 5w40 or 0w40 would have eliminated this problem

    • @robthompson8428
      @robthompson8428 28 дней назад

      0w40 would be be my bet​@@danlewis3605

    • @karlschauff7989
      @karlschauff7989 27 дней назад +1

      @@danlewis3605 0w40 would be my choice.

  • @97footballplayer
    @97footballplayer 28 дней назад +25

    High oil temps reduce viscosity and subsequently oil pressure. At idle, oil pressure dropped below the safe threshold trigger your alarm. If you had idled the engine at 1500rpm, oil pressure would have remained above the threshold and the low oil pressure light would have remained off.

    • @M_Phipps0520
      @M_Phipps0520 28 дней назад +5

      It may need a heavier weight of oil for extreme heat

    • @97footballplayer
      @97footballplayer 28 дней назад +3

      @@M_Phipps0520
      I bet you are correct. The HO hurricane motor uses 0-40 whereas the SO uses 0-20.

  • @apexconversion9249
    @apexconversion9249 27 дней назад +7

    RAM is why we bought one for consistently towing of all kinds of rv’s across the country. This is great to see- looks like they keep their towing game real.
    Impressive

    • @otm646
      @otm646 25 дней назад

      The 3.0 TT is unfortunately going to net you lower economy than an old school v8s in towing applications. You'll have the power especially at elevation, but having to slow down 5 or 10 mph has never been something to bother me.

    • @apexconversion9249
      @apexconversion9249 23 дня назад

      @@otm646 the words economy, towing, and truck shouldn’t be in the same sentence. Might I suggest a Honda civic :)

  • @robertyoung8289
    @robertyoung8289 27 дней назад +3

    Do the Tundra but wait for the 4th of July. When it blows up everyone will think it's part of the show. 😂😂😂

  • @firefox7530
    @firefox7530 28 дней назад +19

    For car and truck reviewers you seem to not know a lot about engines, oil etc. You maybe should team up with valvoline or amsoil and learn something about heat and its impact on oils and what viscosity ratings etc. are standing for.
    it maybe went for a fraction of time below 20psi where Dodge set the low oil pressure warning limit. It turned itself off as the oil was getting cooler and the pressure went slightly up. This is not a fail....

    • @logic_paradox
      @logic_paradox 28 дней назад +2

      In general, you are right. But the bottom line is that the engine is filled with oil either from the manufacturer or recommended by him. So either pick up another oil or improve the cooling. Because the fact that there is not enough. 100 degrees is not an extreme temperature. It's about 37 degrees Celsius.

  • @billjamison2877
    @billjamison2877 28 дней назад +15

    The oil just thinned out because of the temp. I think it's fine.

  • @DerFledderer
    @DerFledderer 28 дней назад +55

    This is the perfect series to hold them accountable. This should be part of every truck review: Exposing weak cooling systems!

    • @yxcvmk
      @yxcvmk 28 дней назад +4

      I am not too sure that the cooling system is too weak. I would never assume that an engine can handle wide open throttle at slow speeds in hot environments for an unlimited time. This test is great, showing the limits, but *in real life people with some sense would not push their vehicle that hard all the time.* Just take the foot off the pedal and take it a bit slower. Everything fine. This is an extreme test, and with a bit more cautious driving (slower, less demanding, not always wide open), there should be no issues. This test is interesting, taking it to the max (from a performance point of view). For "legal" reasons I actually like the highest tow rating possible; and if the vehicle reaches it's thermal limits, just take the foot off the pedal and take it more easy. And this view comes from somebody who in general dislikes the fact that things are build with planned obsolescence - all for (artificial) economic growth to keep the monster from Jackyll island breathing :-), and at the cost and the lifetime of those who actually produce value by working...

    • @matthewgaines10
      @matthewgaines10 26 дней назад +1

      Let’s hold testers accountable. Per all manufacturers, you don’t get max tow ratings at altitude. They are sea level values that are supposed to be reduced at altitude. They are overloading these trucks!

  • @shroom9033
    @shroom9033 25 дней назад +3

    Low oil pressure has nothing to do with oil leaving the engine. The oil pressure was low from the start. I was watching it sit at 30psi at 3,000 rpm. Most engines can get 30 psi at idle. 243° was destroying that oil and at that temp with the engine idling the pressure dropped even further. Oil pumps are mechanically driven off the engine. The higher the rpm, the faster it spins and visa versa at idle it will have the lowest oil pressure.

  • @scottmason3515
    @scottmason3515 26 дней назад +4

    The reason the oil pressure is low is that oil viscosity drops as temperature rises.
    Example a 5w30 has a high temp viscosity rating of 30 at 210 deg F. (SAE standard high temp rating conditions) If the oil temp raises to 230 now the high temp viscosity is closer to a 20 which causes the natural pressure drop from less resistance to flow.
    This is exactly why modern high performance cars require a higher viscosity oil if run flat out on a race track.
    Running oil temps that high will dramatically reduce the useful life of any oil.
    Does the owners manual mention any adjustments for these conditions ?
    It would be interesting to change the oil to one grade higher and re run that test to see if the idle pressure at the end of the Toaster run remains higher without any warnings.
    Keep up the good work !!

  • @kabloosh699
    @kabloosh699 28 дней назад +60

    Really gives perspective that these full size trucks are light duty trucks and this is something you should only do with medium and heavy duty trucks.
    I think a really interesting test would be to do an engine oil test before you go up this route and then an oil test after this to see what has happened and whether you should be changing the oil right away after such a torture test.

    • @Turshin
      @Turshin 28 дней назад +5

      That's a good idea.

    • @Joe-hz1nw
      @Joe-hz1nw 28 дней назад +5

      Then they shouldn’t rate their trucks that high. They deserve to get sued into oblivion for lying.

    • @yxcvmk
      @yxcvmk 28 дней назад +2

      @@Joe-hz1nw I have a different perspective. This is an extreme test, and with a bit more cautious driving (slower, less demanding, not always wide open), there should be no issues. This test is interesting, taking it to the max (from a performance point of view). For "legal" reasons I actually like the highest tow rating possible; and if the vehicle reaches it's thermal limits, just take the foot off the pedal and take it more easy.

    • @Joe-hz1nw
      @Joe-hz1nw 28 дней назад +6

      @@yxcvmk the appropriate way to set limits for vehicles is to be conservative so even if the customer is pushing the vehicle hard, providing it’s on legal roads like the ones in the video, it should be able to accomplish the task it states it can do. There are roads similar to the one shown, in just as hot of weather, where you have to drive at least twice as long as their route before you’re to the top as well.
      Anything else is simply false advertising, truck can potentially be damaged or greatly shorter service life. We shouldn’t excuse manufacturers for what is false advertising, which is what you’re essentially doing with your position.

    • @owenmonaco7817
      @owenmonaco7817 27 дней назад +5

      "Half ton" trucks have been grocery getters for 2 decades now

  • @kelvinmann1058
    @kelvinmann1058 28 дней назад +61

    Thank you to all the manufacturers for their wise decisions to run 0 weight oil and no separate tyranny coolers. 👍🏻🙄

    • @MattChat56
      @MattChat56 27 дней назад

      Right. Not sure why my straight 6 diesel duramax in my 1/2 ton calls for 0w-20. Super thin oil.

    • @lllhunterlll9644
      @lllhunterlll9644 27 дней назад +7

      W doesn’t stand for weight it stands for winter. And is specifically to do with cold temperatures and absolute nothing to do with heat. Grade has everything to do with heat and performance. Going up to 30 or 40 grade would very unlikely change anything. It’s a pump issue not an oil issue.

    • @DrewPera
      @DrewPera 27 дней назад

      @@lllhunterlll9644 exactly. Even a 0w-20 oil is too thick at ambient temperatures to adequately lubricate an engine.

    • @duramaxadventures5832
      @duramaxadventures5832 27 дней назад +1

      ​​@@MattChat56because the bearing clearances are designed for 20 oil AND ABSORBS AND RELEASES HEAT FASTER
      You can run thick oil if you want All you're going to do is open up the gaps on the engine.

    • @MattChat56
      @MattChat56 27 дней назад

      @@duramaxadventures5832 good to know. Maybe I’m a little old school and just have always operated under the notion, if it’s hot and you are working the truck, it’s better to have something heavier than 0W-20. I guess times are changing.

  • @dd5744
    @dd5744 28 дней назад +19

    This is not a truck problem, it’s an oil problem. The viscosity is too low, causing the oil to thin out at high temperatures. I would call this a win for the ram.

  • @jasoncastro7486
    @jasoncastro7486 27 дней назад +3

    Crazy how towing has come along all these years with the fancy hitches. I remember ball hitches being on the bumper itself and the trailer hooking right on

  • @stansronuc3934
    @stansronuc3934 23 дня назад +1

    It's not a fail. Oil viscosity has dropped due to the heat generated by the load. After the oil has cooled, the light went out, indicating oil has cooled to its normal viscosity. That's a victory for Ram.
    Congratulations on Ram and thanks TFL for the test.

  • @kurtyoung6769
    @kurtyoung6769 28 дней назад +39

    I thought you two were smarter than this! How can you assume there is low oil in the engine because the the "low oil pressure" light came on? It's LOW OIL pressure not a NO OIL pressure light. The thin oil just got so hot that it trigger the sensor. Lets face it gentlemen most people would not drive their truck in this manner. Maxxing out the tow capacity and then climbing a long steep grade at the same time is just too much to ask.

    • @firstlast---
      @firstlast--- 23 дня назад +13

      They're journalists not mechanics settle down lol

    • @cdub166
      @cdub166 23 дня назад +11

      Why not test it to its max? Verify what it's meant to handle.

    • @hwertz10
      @hwertz10 20 дней назад

      Most vehicles do not have a oil level measurement on them (and I'm surprised the Dodge does). My 2000 Buick Regal did, they had a light that could come on if it was about 1.5 quarts low, but that is a fairly Buick-specific thing and is uncommon. Most vehicles have an oil pressure light, and it usually comes on because your oil level is too low.

    • @cdub166
      @cdub166 20 дней назад +1

      @@hwertz10 my 2001 camaro SS has a low oil level light.

  • @lesterpittenger5992
    @lesterpittenger5992 28 дней назад +8

    When engine oil is very hot, pressure is very low because rpms controls pressure. The oil is thinned out, so when oil cools the pressure will come back up.

  • @ionbeldiman7255
    @ionbeldiman7255 28 дней назад +5

    Trucks like this came from the factory with 0w20, for economy reasons, but this kind of oil is good for Alaska in winter, not at high altitude on this kind of heat!!! The oil break down and can't create the minimum pressure required by those engines!!! Change the oil, put 5w40 and do the same test again, and you will see that you won't encounter this problem!! Because of crazy pollution norme, they use way to thin oil. I had a similar problem with my 04 v10 excursion on the first trip back home with the car!! As soon as I get home, I put 5w40 in it. No more problem, since then!!
    Please, change the oil and repeat the test.
    Good show, guys!!

  • @thomastaylor6699
    @thomastaylor6699 6 дней назад +1

    Discontinuing the hemi 5.7L engine in the 1500 series ram was a mistake! Did I hear right that there is NO DIPSTICK on the engine? What brilliant engineer thought up that? I own a 1500 Ram with a hemi, and I love it! It will pull all day long no problems whatsoever.

  • @terrysweitzer6772
    @terrysweitzer6772 25 дней назад +1

    Just like anything else in life, how you ask is often more important than what you ask!!!😊😊😊
    We work our trucks hard, but if you know a little bit about how they work you can keep them in a range that doesn't over stress the components.

  • @Danzilly
    @Danzilly 28 дней назад +41

    Andre thanks for testing a tradesman. Enjoyed seeing the torque the hurricane had at elevation.

  • @DirtE30
    @DirtE30 28 дней назад +66

    I’m not an expert here but I don’t think that lowering the weight onto the hitch/axle and THEN putting the load distribution trunions on is a correct use of the load distribution hitch… you shouldn’t be able to get them onto their perch with the load on the trucks…Typically you want to set the hitch up such that you lower the trailer onto the hitch ball, latch the hitch, then use the jack to raise both the trailer and the hitch slightly to allow the trunions to slip over their perches, then lower the truck and trailer down using the jack to pre load the trunions thusly distributing the weight from the rear axle of the truck back to both the front axle of the truck and onto the axles of the trailer. If they simply slip onto the perches with the tongue load fully applied to the truck, you didn’t use them at all. They’re just hanging there.

    • @M_Phipps0520
      @M_Phipps0520 28 дней назад +6

      Exactly well said ! 💯

    • @markr3055
      @markr3055 28 дней назад +5

      Better get Mr. Truck !!😊

    • @enjoytomorrowtoday
      @enjoytomorrowtoday 28 дней назад +3

      I was thinking the same thing.

    • @6628guitarhero
      @6628guitarhero 28 дней назад +4

      This is not a regular weight distribution. They didn't show them adjusting the tension bolt. When all components are on you can set the bar tension with the tension bolt.

    • @mikebradford7780
      @mikebradford7780 28 дней назад +2

      Well that was overloaded on payload and the WDH not set up properly. Cringe.

  • @volvo09
    @volvo09 28 дней назад +75

    No dipstick is absolutely bananas... If you get a truck into the shop with no oil change sticker how the F do you tell if the oil is freshly changed, or is 10k miles overdue and needs to be changed asap?
    More stuff designed to shorten the life of the vehicle.

    • @JohnSmith-lf4be
      @JohnSmith-lf4be 28 дней назад

      You could probably check by looking in the oil fill port.

    • @Dusdaddy
      @Dusdaddy 28 дней назад +4

      Huh? Even with a dipstick, how do you tell? You can't go by looks alone.

    • @JohnSmith-lf4be
      @JohnSmith-lf4be 28 дней назад

      @@Dusdaddy true

    • @UNSC011001
      @UNSC011001 28 дней назад

      ​@@JohnSmith-lf4bethat wouldn't tell you much

    • @JohnSmith-lf4be
      @JohnSmith-lf4be 28 дней назад +1

      @@UNSC011001 it would tell you as much as the dipstick in terms of oil condition.

  • @450rkid69
    @450rkid69 27 дней назад +30

    For being "truck guys" its incredible to listen to you two talk amongst yourselves and hear how truly clueless you both are about engines "your testing" and even mildly technical aspects of them

    • @thesandman775
      @thesandman775 27 дней назад +8

      *it's
      *you're

    • @moreuggaduggas
      @moreuggaduggas 26 дней назад

      They’re reviewers. The only thing these guys can do maybe change oil, that’s about it

    • @U-DoxADV
      @U-DoxADV 26 дней назад +2

      they review trucks as an average day person. there not mechanics.

    • @fordman2288
      @fordman2288 24 дня назад +2

      Or the fact they can't live without an auto 4x4 mode lmao.

  • @matts3943
    @matts3943 26 дней назад +1

    I’ve loved watching the Ike for years, but this test may be just as interesting to see how vehicles power trains manage the stress. Great work TFL!

  • @knightwing4
    @knightwing4 28 дней назад +9

    You guys need a playlist of all of the trucks that have done this test including your Ram 2500.

  • @angrybeavers1175
    @angrybeavers1175 28 дней назад +14

    Hold up a sec, you towed 7000 pounds with the chevy and 10500 with the Ram?

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 28 дней назад +1

      This truck is just a V6. The Chevy was a V8.

    • @donak2773
      @donak2773 28 дней назад +2

      Chevy 🚮

    • @teddonley9594
      @teddonley9594 28 дней назад +8

      ​@@volvo09It's an inline 6

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 28 дней назад +1

      @@teddonley9594 oh yeah, it's the new hurricane engine. I had the pentastar on my mind from a red truck they just showed in another video.

    • @DarthNero
      @DarthNero 28 дней назад +2

      @@teddonley9594i think his point was its a 6 cylinder in oppose to an 8 one.

  • @chrisb9478
    @chrisb9478 28 дней назад +112

    I want to see the Tundra now 😮

    • @mxerb5912
      @mxerb5912 28 дней назад +39

      The engine will blow up

    • @jamesallen7205
      @jamesallen7205 28 дней назад

      😅​@@mxerb5912

    • @HaroldCombs
      @HaroldCombs 28 дней назад +7

      Same. It tows like a diesel but I imagine it will fail like the rest given they’re running 0w16 oil.

    • @pryme2013
      @pryme2013 28 дней назад +5

      This video is probably a prelude to the video of the tundra passing without failing. Toyota needs ppl to regain confidence in their tundra.

    • @pathunter7003
      @pathunter7003 28 дней назад +2

      @@pryme2013 or perhaps they can’t find a dependable toYota to test….they have a tendancy to crater anymore

  • @Slider68
    @Slider68 24 дня назад +2

    The main reason large transmission coolers are not required these days is modern transmissions have lock up torque converts, that are strong enough to remain locked at almost all the time while towing uphill.

  • @325xitgrocgetter
    @325xitgrocgetter 24 дня назад +2

    You should try this with an old school big block truck...say 1995 or earlier. My biggest fear of these new vehicles is the 0 weight motor oils..back in the day my Dodge truck had a variety of viscosities recommended for hot and cold weather extremes.

  • @jacobforeman9916
    @jacobforeman9916 28 дней назад +8

    It's the thin oil they put in them now. Ow-20 is not thick enough in any of these engines.

  • @shaun9067
    @shaun9067 28 дней назад +11

    Use the Autotrans change Manually that is most Aussies do and learn . When a Auto Trans shifts in and out of gears towing thay heat up big time

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 28 дней назад +4

      They like to let the truck do it's thing to test how the programming is.
      They say locking it in a gear is the right way to tow up a grade, but that makes the test easier.

    • @lordcommander3224
      @lordcommander3224 28 дней назад +2

      Yes, most people who actually tow on grades usually do that. But, they are letting the truck shift normally since that’s how all the tests have been.

  • @TomStp
    @TomStp 28 дней назад +9

    Your issue is heat related, as the oil warm up the tickness or viscosity reduced which leads to the low oil pressure. higher viscosity oil would help with that particular use case

  • @EOtekk
    @EOtekk 22 дня назад +1

    This was not a fail. The oil pressure warning comes on at 19psi. The oil was thinned out just barely enough to briefly trigger the sensor and it returned back to normal in 30 seconds. This is not a failure of the truck. This is a result of the viscosity properties of oil.

  • @chrissanders1038
    @chrissanders1038 24 дня назад +7

    Anyone with a brain would never get a 1/2 ton to tow a skid loader, no matter if it's uphill or on flat ground. That is absolutely stupid.

    • @shazmodeus2795
      @shazmodeus2795 22 дня назад

      the cargo wasn't really the point, it was the weight of the cargo they were after. The trailer could have been filled with i-beams, they just wanted something close to 10,000 pounds.

  • @chico1014
    @chico1014 28 дней назад +14

    it still had 21 psi of oil pressure,it and apparently thats when the light comes on in the ram but the light went out at 22psi so I wouldnt cal that a fail because 21 psi is still plenty there just being carefull and if you would have given it just a few hundred more revs at idle the light would have gone out right away

  • @okcmoparguy724
    @okcmoparguy724 28 дней назад +26

    I like TFL but think Andre induces some drama in this test. The traction control light was coming on while he was on the pavement! The erratic throttle will keep the transmission shifting around and prevent the torque converter from locking up which drastically increases trans AND engine temps. This is not how any responsible person would operate equipment in this environment.
    Andre's test proves if the trucks can be deemed "Mouth Breather Rated". We all know if this were actually Andre's truck he would have driven the hill differently as he's a very intelligent person.
    As others have stated the low oil psi light was a byproduct of high temps and 0w20 oil. If you drove any of these trucks reasonably, maybe 2nd gear the entire trip, I think the results would be much better. With the steep gravel road grades I'd even consider 4LO range. That gravel might slip enough on the switchbacks to prevent t-case binding and the additional gear reduction on that last leg would certainly be much easier on the equipment.

    • @jamesevans20
      @jamesevans20 27 дней назад +1

      Agreed, That’s why you have a 2nd & 3rd gear selection, preferably 2nd gear would have prevented the transmission over shifting and would have been easier on the engine as well.

    • @coltonmunger1872
      @coltonmunger1872 26 дней назад

      I don't think he was purposely adjusting throttle. The pickup was shifting itself trying to keep a certain speed. He does need to lock it into a gear. Agreed

    • @slingbart705
      @slingbart705 25 дней назад +1

      He's to busy talking to drive this responsibly. See the video where he drag races a pickup pulling a camper and blows the driveshaft out, totally stupid.

    • @michaelflath4438
      @michaelflath4438 24 дня назад +1

      You have proven your point invalid by saying "if" they had been driven/treated/used differently. It's laughable. Babied correctly, a Yugo could be driven a million miles.
      Common sense is in short supply in this country. Obviously you do not have a fleet of vehicles like this that see repeated IGNORANT use every day. Our construction company has over a dozen of these, and the stupidity of people who get in, start it, immediately put it in drive and move is staggering. They pay zero attention to warning lights, throttle position, gear slection or instructions. THAT is what this test is designed to do.
      Obviously anyone with half a brain would not treat vehicles like this daily....but you'd be shocked at how many do.

  • @jza80king
    @jza80king 28 дней назад +24

    This is one of those tests where I wished you guys did all the older 1/2 trucks. I wanna see the new Tundra but also the 5.7L V8 Tundra, the 5.6L Titan, the Ford Coyote too.

    • @jarrodwidiger5472
      @jarrodwidiger5472 28 дней назад +1

      I'd try this in my titan

    • @302Mustang13
      @302Mustang13 26 дней назад

      ​@@jarrodwidiger547211,000 pounds up Gold Hill??

    • @jarrodwidiger5472
      @jarrodwidiger5472 26 дней назад

      @@302Mustang13 my GVWR is 9200 on my titan. But I'd put her to a torcher test of 11k. I wouldn't risk it if I weren't afraid to lose it. Trade in and private party resale are terrible on a 200k rusty 06' titan. Only thing it's got going for it is it still runs like a champ and I take pretty good care of it. I'd actually like to see if it could do it.

    • @302Mustang13
      @302Mustang13 26 дней назад

      @@jarrodwidiger5472 gvwr on a 2006 Titan is 9200 lbs. I don't think so. No sane owner would do this max tow test as TFL does. At minimum, the oil and transmission fluid need to be changed afterwards.

  • @dwreckd1836
    @dwreckd1836 22 дня назад

    I absolutely love this channel and I bought my truck based off this channel in fact it was the same exact model and color you guys tested. Also want to add I’ve been critical of Roman in the past but this type of video is where he shines. His journalism background shines through to keep these manufacturers honest.

  • @aslkdfjhg
    @aslkdfjhg 24 дня назад +2

    Still doing that hill at 30mph with that trailer on a hot day is really pushing regardless of the truck or the oil it has. The regular joe would be driving at half the pace.

  • @derekstone9715
    @derekstone9715 28 дней назад +5

    When oil = hot... oil tends to thin out. 99% sure this is what happened.

  • @topsecretmx5142
    @topsecretmx5142 28 дней назад +9

    High oil temps can thin the oil enough that it could decrease the viscosity causing low oil pressure.

  • @AP383BB
    @AP383BB 28 дней назад +15

    So the truck didn't actually fail... you set parameters that you knew it would fail at due to the odd metrics you decided to test the truck at. Oil gets thinner the hotter it gets. I'd be willing to bet the owner's manual tells you to run a thicker oil for the temps you are running this truck at. This is most likely a user issue, not an issue with the truck. I never fail to be amazed by the lack of automotive knowledge from supposed "experts" who review vehicles everyday

    • @AP383BB
      @AP383BB 28 дней назад +2

      Also, when you have a low-pressure light, why would you leave the truck idling????

    • @VKED23
      @VKED23 21 день назад

      Thank God we have you to save us

  • @dillonlamb8588
    @dillonlamb8588 16 дней назад

    Love to see these tests. You guys are keeping manufacturers honest

  • @javic1979
    @javic1979 25 дней назад +2

    the Oil dropped below 20psi.. most low oil pressure lights never turn on until the oil pressure drops below 5 or 10 psi
    its good RAM shows both oil temp and pressure whilist driving

  • @Motorcycledad160
    @Motorcycledad160 28 дней назад +13

    One of the issues with running such thin oil in modern vehicles. I'm not surprised. Oil temps got so high that the viscosity thinned down and idle pressure dropped below programmed limits in the computer. It actually did really well. I did a similar run with a 8,000 lb trailer with my 2023 Nissan Titan XD and the temps barely moved. Those turbos create a LOT of heat.

    • @karlschauff7989
      @karlschauff7989 27 дней назад

      I'm confused because I thought most modern engines have the ability to vary oil pressure even at low RPM. I wonder if that was the maximum oil pressure it could generate at hot idle or if this engine isn't using a variable displacement oil pump.

    • @haywire17
      @haywire17 27 дней назад

      Yeah, betcha Ram's "FIX" is to re-flash the computer with a lower minimum oil pressure "tolerance" (say, 15psi instead of 20) - LOL

    • @Motorcycledad160
      @Motorcycledad160 27 дней назад

      @@haywire17 Probably exactly right 👍

    • @Motorcycledad160
      @Motorcycledad160 27 дней назад

      @@karlschauff7989 I think you are correct about it not having a variable displacement pump, but I could be wrong, just a guess based on the fact it couldn't keep pressure at idle when the viscosity thinned out. My truck specs 0W-20 year round. I put 5W-20 in it during the summer. Even though it's still rated as a 20 "weight" when at operating temps, the viscosity is actually slightly higher than a 0W-20 at operating temps because the API specs have a range.

  • @stevekniess3665
    @stevekniess3665 28 дней назад +30

    The traction light came on when the truck was on pavement maybe 9 minutes in.

    • @gearjunkie3402
      @gearjunkie3402 28 дней назад +12

      It has so much torque it was spinning the tires.

    • @john-4998
      @john-4998 28 дней назад +5

      It was definitely eating the rear tires

    • @genewind4850
      @genewind4850 28 дней назад +1

      I also noticed that.. LOL

    • @JsGarage
      @JsGarage 27 дней назад +6

      It came on multiple times. That’s probably mostly from those turns on that grade. Who knows how much pedal Andre was applying too. High torque engines and sensitive stability systems get traction indicators pretty easily especially pulling a trailer in these conditions.

    • @tracydjenkins
      @tracydjenkins 27 дней назад +2

      That's why they put it in 4wd

  • @davidjernigan8161
    @davidjernigan8161 28 дней назад +9

    Max tow ratings are most likely based on sea level towing, not towing up mountains at extreme temperatures.

  • @1320fastback
    @1320fastback 27 дней назад +1

    The fact that even a lowly half ton can survive this test is amazing. The fact that all three made it without going nuclear is een more amazing.
    I still don't like all the computers and electronics on new vehicles and do not believe they will last so am keeping my 12 Valve.

  • @strategicbushcraft6391
    @strategicbushcraft6391 27 дней назад +1

    The oil pressure can temporarily drop from the new variable flow oil pumps that slow down at idle to save fuel, that combined with the slope and heated oil may have done it.

  • @Lthrnk0331
    @Lthrnk0331 28 дней назад +17

    I don't think it's a fail per say...I would bet the high heat created thin oil and the incline threw the light. Look forward to an update

    • @cantbsdave
      @cantbsdave 28 дней назад +3

      That’s exactly what happened. Not really a fail in my book. Maybe the manufacturer can allow for 5w for heavy towing applications?

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone 28 дней назад +1

      Incline has nothing to do with oil pressure, the pickup tube is at the back. It got low pressure from being a low viscosity oil being superheated and thinning out.

    • @jaylapointe1654
      @jaylapointe1654 28 дней назад +4

      You say that, but then the thin oil and low pressure causes premature wear on critical components leading to early failures.

    • @explor360
      @explor360 23 дня назад

      @@cantbsdave it's not the 0W that's the issue per se. 0W is the grade at start up. As the temperature rises so does the viscosity, in this case up to a 20 weight once the engine is warmed up. The problem is when the oil gets very hi it actually looses some of its viscosity and begins acting like a 15 or even 10 weight which isn't "thick" enough to properly lubricate the engine. That is why using a xW- 30 weigh would be better.
      BTW, there is really no such thing as a true 0 weight oil. They are actually a 2 or 3 weight to start out. That is why using a 5W- oil is not an issue except in extreme winter conditions. I got this info from a fluid dynamics engineer that worked on developing oil additive packages for the major oil companies.

  • @BTDrgonzo
    @BTDrgonzo 28 дней назад +10

    Manufacturers have been using tranny coolers within the engine coolant radiator for decades. One reason they do this vs an external dedicated tranny cooler is because the engine coolant helps the transmission fluid get UP to operating temperature more quickly as well as keep it from getting too hot.

  • @freddymardiceii3273
    @freddymardiceii3273 28 дней назад +33

    Makes me glad I have a HD 2500 Cummins!

    • @mikebradford7780
      @mikebradford7780 28 дней назад +2

      Same here.

    • @187evil1
      @187evil1 28 дней назад +3

      I'm sorry that means you have no payload 😂. Diesel 2500 are just for show. Not enough payload to do anything.

    • @Captain-Awesome
      @Captain-Awesome 28 дней назад +3

      I am looking forward to the HD Trucks running the Toaster!

    • @justin_steen
      @justin_steen 27 дней назад

      ⁠@@187evil1whatever you say hunnybun

    • @187evil1
      @187evil1 27 дней назад

      ​@@justin_steenI've got some glaze for your honey bun!

  • @mendiesel7932
    @mendiesel7932 21 день назад

    That passed with flying colors. Makes perfect sense. Oil is hot and thin.. that engine wants to keep pumping the oil at a certain pressure to keep it from heat soaking and keep it running through the pump.
    Soon as your temp dropped 10 degrees, at the same oil pressure.. it was happy again.

  • @n6nl-1
    @n6nl-1 24 дня назад +2

    Let’s see that Tundra Capstone attempt this.

    • @tedlulis973
      @tedlulis973 24 дня назад +1

      😂 Now that would be super embarrassing for the TuRD😢

  • @dudehere340
    @dudehere340 28 дней назад +7

    Not a fail. It crossed the finish line. It doesn't matter if you crash or run out of gas. As long as you cross the finish line.

  • @M_Phipps0520
    @M_Phipps0520 28 дней назад +4

    No the oil pressure dipped due to oil temp and a thin oil !

  • @matthewmortensen7401
    @matthewmortensen7401 27 дней назад +3

    Did not the Cybertruck pass this test with no issues? Can you test the Lightning?

  • @Bradamsmx5
    @Bradamsmx5 19 часов назад

    As so many others have said. Low oil pressure is due to temperature. Oil viscosity changes rather quickly when they are near their rated operating limits. If you were near the limits for the engine oil temperature, the viscosity likely dropped precipitously, to the point where the pump could not build adequate pressure. Especially considering the light occurred when you stopped. Which means engine (and therefore the oil pump) rpm dropped. Also, you would have excess heat from working the engine so hard for so long then suddenly dropping the airflow across the radiator whenever you came to a stop, it takes the radiator a longer time to dissipate the heat when stationary. This would cause a brief spike in all of your liquids temperature.

  • @edwardlloyd1516
    @edwardlloyd1516 25 дней назад +2

    That wasn't a fail. You can't load an engine that much and then abruptly drop it to idle. Of course the oil pressure dropped. The corrct procedure would have been to pull over and then keep the idle high at 2000rpm for a couple of minutes and then idle for another couple on minutes to allow the engine to cool down while still having enough oil pressure and to keep feeding the turbos while they spin down and cool off.

  • @hpkntnw
    @hpkntnw 27 дней назад +3

    23:01 0W-20 is too thin for any engine never mind a twin turbo. 5W-30 that wouldn’t happen and if that was my truck that’s what it would get.

    • @timdeneau6172
      @timdeneau6172 26 дней назад

      10w30 is even better for work

    • @scottdowney4318
      @scottdowney4318 16 дней назад

      absolutely go with 30w and if engine is worn use 40w

  • @ak1ranger
    @ak1ranger 27 дней назад +12

    Since the Ford, Chevy and RM trucks all failed this test.....maybe (it is, obviously) this is simply beyond the actual real world capabilities for half ton trucks.

    • @PorkChop700
      @PorkChop700 23 дня назад

      the towing test at 10,000 lb is for 250-350 series pickup truck not 1500

  • @bryandepiazzy8679
    @bryandepiazzy8679 28 дней назад +15

    Do these video series with 1 ton trucks at almost max payload

    • @NOXStellans
      @NOXStellans 28 дней назад

      Why? When they are failing with less?

    • @gamache1101
      @gamache1101 28 дней назад +3

      @@NOXStellans well HD trucks have bigger radiators and a transmission cooler.

  • @daesmith3274
    @daesmith3274 27 дней назад

    Run into hot oil often in big rigs. Often my caterpillar c15 cooks it's oil before coolant boils over. After a climb like that just hold a bit above idle for a couple minutes. Not a big deal if you cope with it. Badass tow test!