Panther140
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 8, 2014
- 375
Does anybody know of a way for a consumer to gauge the endurance life of an engine before purchasing a vehicle equipped with it? My dream is to go to a vehicle dealership and be presented with data from unbiased endurance tests on an array of vehicles and their components. I want to know how many hours an engine is designed to last at a given duty cycle as well as the standard deviation in time before they fail on endurance tests. Instead, the salesperson tells me to "check out that sweet infotainment system" and then they fumble through a brochure before trying to convince me that I should get a crossover SUV.
The way that I have currently been gauging the engine's durability is by looking at generators that are equipped with the same engine that is in the vehicle that I'm considering. If I can't find a generator with the engine that a vehicle is equipped with, then I am far less likely to consider buying it (Toyota 1MZ-FE being an example of an exception).
That method doesn't work as well when vehicles like the 3.5L ecoboost come into question. I like the idea of a v6 turbocharged half-ton, but I also know that this platform is vulnerable to higher deviations from expected endurance.
Think about how many engineers there are in the U.S. Why are companies not marketing to engineers by giving them cold-hard data?
"Formal education is a weapon, whose effect depends on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." ~ Joseph Stalin
The way that I have currently been gauging the engine's durability is by looking at generators that are equipped with the same engine that is in the vehicle that I'm considering. If I can't find a generator with the engine that a vehicle is equipped with, then I am far less likely to consider buying it (Toyota 1MZ-FE being an example of an exception).
That method doesn't work as well when vehicles like the 3.5L ecoboost come into question. I like the idea of a v6 turbocharged half-ton, but I also know that this platform is vulnerable to higher deviations from expected endurance.
Think about how many engineers there are in the U.S. Why are companies not marketing to engineers by giving them cold-hard data?
"Formal education is a weapon, whose effect depends on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." ~ Joseph Stalin