Jump to content

Motor Trend Reviews the WT


383

Recommended Posts

Posted
14 hours ago, Grumpy Bear said:

How is it a guy who can code went straight to stupid. You're saying I don't have the ability to code? Why would you assume that?  

 

That be as is may, it wasn't the point and I'm pretty sure you understand that...or maybe not. The exchange was about ABILITY not ones current state of knowledge. Don't be one of those guys who confuses Education with Intelligence. I gave the guy more credit for his intelligence than he gave himself. He didn't complain....what's your dog in the fight? 

 

https://www.onlinecollegecourses.com/2012/01/24/15-famous-thinkers-who-couldnt-spell/

 

Review the list and try again. By your standard none of these peoples works have merit. 

 

Speaking of stupid; what in the world makes you think I'm comparing education vs intelligence? You're way out in the weeds here.

 

What I'm trying to tell you, is that people have different skills and abilities, and it shouldn't come as a shock to you that people prefer to read and view expert opinions by people who know, rather than try to read a tech paper and muddle through it (poorly) themselves. That preference can be based on several reasons, one of them simply being, not having the ability to digest all that information.

 

I brought up coding as an extreme example to illustrate my point; my skills and education is in computer science, there is a very high chance that yours isn't. So you pay experts me like to write your software for you, build your computers and fix them etc., and I pay (indirectly) experts to study and test/compare a bunch of trucks I'm interested in.

 

Specialization, it's a thing.

  • Replies 54
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Posted
14 minutes ago, the wanderer said:

 

Speaking of stupid; what in the world makes you think I'm comparing education vs intelligence? You're way out in the weeds here.

 

What I'm trying to tell you, is that people have different skills and abilities, and it shouldn't come as a shock to you that people prefer to read and view expert opinions by people who know, rather than try to read a tech paper and muddle through it (poorly) themselves. That preference can be based on several reasons, one of them simply being, not having the ability to digest all that information.

 

I brought up coding as an extreme example to illustrate my point; my skills and education is in computer science, there is a very high chance that yours isn't. So you pay experts me like to write your software for you, build your computers and fix them etc., and I pay (indirectly) experts to study and test/compare a bunch of trucks I'm interested in.

 

Specialization, it's a thing.

Your point was not lost on me. Mine has been lost on everyone.

 

If a chicken can learn to play a tune. The difference between skill and ability is education. A monkey can be taught sign language. Intelligence is the SPEED one learns or solves problems at with which he is familiar. Education is familuarization. Skill is honed education. All but the truly mentally impaired can learn anything they wish to and be as skilled at it as their drive and patients will take them. 

 

My issue with this tread is people accepting someone as an expert when they haven't enough rudimentary knowledge in that field themselves to even know what an expert might look like. Then bowing to them as if they were gods. A sheepskin on a wall does not guarantee proficiency. You want a brain surgeon that is a first year resident and you're his first patient or the guy with a track record of 1,000 wins, no losses removing your tumor? A popular blog??? 

 

My issue is people arguing to the death things they take someone's word for that they are to lazy to even look into. Looks good, must be right? How did that work out for Eve talking to the snake and that girl was perfect in mind and unfettered in ability. She sill got deceived.   Reading a forum or a blog of individuals who are expert because they are popular or because they say so will never make anyone knowledgeable enough to have an argument over anything INTELLEGNETLY. Anyone who buys a tire because 10,000 consumers gave it five starts is an idiot. Ever hear of the hundredth monkey? 

 

I never made SAE, ASTM, Doctoral thesis or White papers versus blogs, YouTube and personal experiences an either or thing. You all did that in a massive group assumption. What I did was offer the idea that they (these other tools) and a cuppa coffee might shed light on some dumb idea that has gained popular traction.

 

My issue is, that EVERYONE has the ability that is of reasonably sound mind. That there is a difference between an OPINION and a BIAS and that a roomful of snowflakes can't get past themselves to grasp the difference but are content to create a blizzard.

 

There is a difference between CAN'T and just DON'T WANT TO. If you don't want to...fine....but if that is your choice then don't scream FOUL when your error is pointed out.

 

Everything I know started AS ignorance. Everything I've become good at came at the expense of time, effort and dogged determination. Every ignorance I overcame started with the realization I was ignorant and WRONG. You can't learn anything without enough humility to listen open mindedly, honest enough to KNOW your wrong and hungry enough to demand that void be filled.

 

 

 

 

Posted

Then you throw in that people see and experience things differently. I know a girl who drove a pinto for 10 years love the thing. Has been looking for a clean one to buy, what are the odds. I can say how much I enjoy all the Chevys I owned. My favorite is the old truck I have now. If I mentioned how much luck we had with Hyundai, I’m a traitor. I read all the reviews when I’m ready to buy. I go to car lots and drive a two or three year old one to see how they hold up. It’s amazing how a mag review can rag on something that doesn’t bother me at all. One of the things that vehicle are reviewed hard on is the information center. I have zero interest in that. Car play big deal, it’s a distraction. My phone Bluetooth I’m good.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted
5 hours ago, Grumpy Bear said:

Your point was not lost on me. Mine has been lost on everyone.

 

If a chicken can learn to play a tune. The difference between skill and ability is education. A monkey can be taught sign language. Intelligence is the SPEED one learns or solves problems at with which he is familiar. Education is familuarization. Skill is honed education. All but the truly mentally impaired can learn anything they wish to and be as skilled at it as their drive and patients will take them. 

 

My issue with this tread is people accepting someone as an expert when they haven't enough rudimentary knowledge in that field themselves to even know what an expert might look like. Then bowing to them as if they were gods. A sheepskin on a wall does not guarantee proficiency. You want a brain surgeon that is a first year resident and you're his first patient or the guy with a track record of 1,000 wins, no losses removing your tumor? A popular blog??? 

 

My issue is people arguing to the death things they take someone's word for that they are to lazy to even look into. Looks good, must be right? How did that work out for Eve talking to the snake and that girl was perfect in mind and unfettered in ability. She sill got deceived.   Reading a forum or a blog of individuals who are expert because they are popular or because they say so will never make anyone knowledgeable enough to have an argument over anything INTELLEGNETLY. Anyone who buys a tire because 10,000 consumers gave it five starts is an idiot. Ever hear of the hundredth monkey? 

 

I never made SAE, ASTM, Doctoral thesis or White papers versus blogs, YouTube and personal experiences an either or thing. You all did that in a massive group assumption. What I did was offer the idea that they (these other tools) and a cuppa coffee might shed light on some dumb idea that has gained popular traction.

 

My issue is, that EVERYONE has the ability that is of reasonably sound mind. That there is a difference between an OPINION and a BIAS and that a roomful of snowflakes can't get past themselves to grasp the difference but are content to create a blizzard.

 

There is a difference between CAN'T and just DON'T WANT TO. If you don't want to...fine....but if that is your choice then don't scream FOUL when your error is pointed out.

 

Everything I know started AS ignorance. Everything I've become good at came at the expense of time, effort and dogged determination. Every ignorance I overcame started with the realization I was ignorant and WRONG. You can't learn anything without enough humility to listen open mindedly, honest enough to KNOW your wrong and hungry enough to demand that void be filled.

 

 

 

 

 

I get your point about too many fake reviewers, I really do. But that doesn't take away from the fact that there are a number of high quality reviewers as well.

 

At the end of the day, specs and papers are meaningless to me. They really are. You can read all the tech papers you want, but the proof is in the pudding. How does it actually drive. Case in point, TFL Truck did a comparison on youtube with the big three 1 ton trucks. The chevy had the lowest tow rating and engine torque, so they used a trailer set to the Chevy's max, then drove the 3 trucks with the same trailer, up the Eisenhower Tunnel and back down again. This is a strenuous test, it takes about 8 mins one way at highway speeds, uphill the whole way at a good slope.  Guess which truck performed best, and was the most stable ride? The chevy.  The specs would have you believe the Ford or Ram should have won, but when they actually drove all 3, the result proved otherwise.

 

Another example; the ram 1500 v8 is supposed to get like 21 MPG hyw or something like that; they (TFL Truck) tested it several times (rebel) and got around 17 or so.


Third example; the chevy 2.7 turbo is supposed to get 22 or 23 MPG hyw, TFL tested it (exact same loop as they always use) and got 25 MPG.

 

That's real world testing. That means more to me then all the specs and details you can possibly find in some tech paper.

 

At the end of the day, you and I will not agree because we value different approaches. I'm just saying you should not discard a youtube review simply because it's not a tech paper. There is very high quality content there, and it's not that hard to figure out which sources are good and which are blowing hot air in an echo chamber.

Posted
4 hours ago, the wanderer said:

 

I get your point about too many fake reviewers, I really do. But that doesn't take away from the fact that there are a number of high quality reviewers as well.

 

At the end of the day, specs and papers are meaningless to me. They really are. You can read all the tech papers you want, but the proof is in the pudding. How does it actually drive. Case in point, TFL Truck did a comparison on youtube with the big three 1 ton trucks. The chevy had the lowest tow rating and engine torque, so they used a trailer set to the Chevy's max, then drove the 3 trucks with the same trailer, up the Eisenhower Tunnel and back down again. This is a strenuous test, it takes about 8 mins one way at highway speeds, uphill the whole way at a good slope.  Guess which truck performed best, and was the most stable ride? The chevy.  The specs would have you believe the Ford or Ram should have won, but when they actually drove all 3, the result proved otherwise.

 

Another example; the ram 1500 v8 is supposed to get like 21 MPG hyw or something like that; they (TFL Truck) tested it several times (rebel) and got around 17 or so.


Third example; the chevy 2.7 turbo is supposed to get 22 or 23 MPG hyw, TFL tested it (exact same loop as they always use) and got 25 MPG.

 

That's real world testing. That means more to me then all the specs and details you can possibly find in some tech paper.

 

At the end of the day, you and I will not agree because we value different approaches. I'm just saying you should not discard a youtube review simply because it's not a tech paper. There is very high quality content there, and it's not that hard to figure out which sources are good and which are blowing hot air in an echo chamber.

Did you read all that I wrote? Cut and paste below. Review please and ask yourself if it is I who has such a narrow focus. There are, as you agree tons of FAKE reviews. The OTHER items I like help sort the trash. Use them BOTH. 

 

I never made SAE, ASTM, Doctoral thesis or White papers versus blogs, YouTube and personal experiences an either or thing. You all did that in a massive group assumption. What I did was offer the idea that they (these other tools) and a cuppa coffee might shed light on some dumb idea that has gained popular traction.

 

We are getting closer to an agreement. Just a little further. :P

Posted
16 hours ago, Grumpy Bear said:

Did you read all that I wrote? Cut and paste below. Review please and ask yourself if it is I who has such a narrow focus. There are, as you agree tons of FAKE reviews. The OTHER items I like help sort the trash. Use them BOTH. 

 

I never made SAE, ASTM, Doctoral thesis or White papers versus blogs, YouTube and personal experiences an either or thing. You all did that in a massive group assumption. What I did was offer the idea that they (these other tools) and a cuppa coffee might shed light on some dumb idea that has gained popular traction.

 

We are getting closer to an agreement. Just a little further. :P

 

Back up the truck there Grumpy. Here is a link to your first post which I originally responded to:

 

 

The guy you responded to said MT was getting their butt kicked by youtube channels like TFL Truck, which you then outright dismissed (read that post again) as useless.

 

A little snippet from that:

Quote

How did an Internet system designed, and at one time delivered, INFORMATION become a pay per view service for idiots that believe a catchy video is worth more than an ASTM or SAE tech paper? We've trade science for opinion and people with expertise for convenience. People like it when the reviews support their likes and biases. I'd rather have the truth.  

 

I'm simply telling you, that MANY people value TFL truck MORE than a tech paper, by far, because for a start tech papers are very hard to digest if your not into specs (like most people) and capable of understanding them, and secondly specs really tell you shit; it's the experience that matters, whether it's driving a loaded truck up a hill, or purchasing your next computer (CPU is irrelevant in most use cases) etc etc. Specs require a LOT of education and knowledge to make an informed choice, and they can also be fudged (EPA and/or tow ratings anyone?) A review (youtube or other) which does a ton of comparison, in real world conditions, is infinitely more valuable to the vast majority of people.

 

This will be my last post on this because I feel you're going in circles.

Posted
On 3/23/2019 at 7:55 AM, the wanderer said:

TFL Truck rocks, they are such an amazing team. Very unbiased, down to earth, and lightly humerous all at the same time. Those guys have everyone else beat as far as I'm concerned.

If you can see past their Ford bias.  

Posted
On 3/24/2019 at 3:45 PM, OnTheReel said:

I’ve used 4 low A LOT over the years for towing. Especially when I had underpowered manual transmission trucks like my old Dodge Ram. I even pulled the front driveshaft out so I could steer on dry pavement in what essentially became 2 low mode.

 

Maybe it’s not as important now, but most people I know with decent sized boats still use low range to pull them out of the water around here. The ramps are steep and slippery, and the torque multiplication really helps.

 

I am baffled why they would remove low range as standard on this 4WD series of trucks. I think most people would take a floor shifter instead of the buttons if they could get low range back.

 

I always thought of AWD as permanent, always on, like the old Denalis were...

I wouldn't consider a truck that does not have 4WD low, especially when all of the other options do, My lake has a naturally formed rock boat launch and its imperative to use 4 low to pull the wakeboard boat out! engine size does not matter in that situation

Posted
7 hours ago, MaverickZ71 said:

If you can see past their Ford bias.  

 

lol, every fanboy likes to accuse a reviewer of being "biased" just because they don't pick "your" truck. Here's the thing, Andre personally drives a Hummer (GMC), Nathan is really into RAM power wagons ("powerwagon don't care") and loves the Tacoma (Toyota), Roman just bought a company Rebel (RAM), Tommy is into Jeeps and Land Rovers (and they own both in the company). Kent and Andre have been on record so often reviewing and liking features (engines) of the new trucks.

 

So. I'm not seeing the Ford bias here, maverick. Don't be so sensitive.

  • 3 months later...
Posted
On 3/22/2019 at 1:07 PM, 383 said:

One of the biggest complaints is is the drivers seat. I'm 6'1", 195 and it fits me just fine.

I am 5'10" 240 and seat fits good but the front middle sit it hard as a rock.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • There would be one way of determining the quality of the factory oil although probably more than a typical oil lab test, and that would be to draw out some oil from a new truck and send a sample to a lab that could do a more elaborate test of the oil. The issue with too little oil in the diff may not be the lack of lubrication of the diff bearings and gears themselves ( although a lack of oil volume for cooling ) but the wheel bearings because at some point the oil would be too low to properly get onto the spinning axle or fed along the axle tube. That was the claim by the local dealer from a couple of trucks in recent years that had the wheel bearings fail and they figured from lack of sufficient oil due to a severe underfilled diff and some of the bearing material made its way to the diff and it got damaged as well so the axle housings were just replaced on warranty. But your right that if the diff is over filled by whatever margin that it causes more churning of the oil than is desirable and that is no good either and can cause a pinion seal to leak. Also old oil I believe can tend to loose some of its properties like antifoaming and another good reason to change the diff oil every so often. 
    • I would be surprised if the diff's were not filled (with the cheapest gear lube) at the axle factory before being shipped to GM.  If you ever watched them building trucks they install the axles and all suspension parts with the frame upside down and then turn it over before its time to install the engine.     Too much gear lube in a axle can be worse than not enough especially with a lower quality GL where is get whipped up with entrained air (foam)  weakening its ability to lubricate.        
    • This is the 6.6 gasser section of the forum, you should either delete or modify your previous post as it is misleading for anyone looking for factual information on their 6.6 gas engine.
    • Well....I've done my first intake gasket. Probably wrong, but...we'll see?   Ultra black on the china walls and 1/4" up onto the sides of the intake gaskets. Permatex High Tack (couldn't find Gaskachinch) on the head side of the intake gasket. I read wrong and it says you're supposed to put it on the mating surface of the head, not the gasket. Hoping it's like a PB&J sandwich where it doesn't matter what side the PB goes on so long as there's jelly. That crap is messy/sticky and I got a dab or two on the intake port openings, tried to wipe it off. Hopefully it won't be a big deal and will only aid in sealing.   Per instructions I left the intake (top side) of the gasket dry except for a light smear of RTV around the coolant ports. Wiggling the intake in there was a bear but I had help to free me of surrounding wiring/stuff but I was basically able to set it straight down lined up with the bolt holes.   I did not think to wait until the RTV skinned over but there probably was 5-10 minutes while it sat before installing the intake.   Bolts finger tight first. Then, followed the Chilton's manual pattern to snug them to 15 lb-ft.   Waited a little over an hour, and then did the final torque in sequence again to 35 lb-ft.   Yesterday I replaced the fuel pressure regulator and got my new "nut and bolt kit" (fuel lines) installed. Damn GM used security torx on the spider, which I don't have, so I got scammed at the local HW store for an off-brand security Torx bit set.   The new driver's door mirror arrived yesterday, so, there's a chance this thing could be running and road legal tomorrow? I don't want to get my hopes up.   This will be my first time stabbing a distributor, too. Although, lucky me, someone else marked the old distributor for removal previously, I did see that. (Someone's been here before!!). Engine is still at TDC so it *should* be just a matter of transferring the mark to the new dizzy and rotating it into place.
    • He has his dad’s newer truck he’s put away. He has several old cars he rotates between him and his family. I’ve seen a restored square body and a SS Chevy truck he’s sometimes drives. He did raffle off a new suburban recently. As much as he is watched if he drove new stuff as a rule we’d know it. It would be fine by me. I don’t care what people prefer. I got one more new one in me. I’d rather my wife get one. I can’t get her out of the Genesis. Don’t tell anyone. I want her to get an electric truck. I want to put a generator in the back. Just because. She hasn’t bit yet.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...