2009 - 2014 F-150

6.2 or Eco Boost, Which one

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Old Aug 17, 2011 | 11:24 PM
  #166  
Wookie's Avatar
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From: Cabot, AR
Originally Posted by lightninquick
I'm not trying to stroke Everyones ego, but any of the ford motors would have been a fine choice.
Truer words have never been spoken.
 
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 01:14 AM
  #167  
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Originally Posted by lightninquick
I chose the ecoboost because of the turbos. I loved my powerstrokes but I don't need to pull over 10k very often. I also could not stand going to the fuel pump and having to pay more for fuel. I just need a all purpose truck. I don't need the fastest or best pulling truck.

If I was gonna buy a truck to hotrod out I would have picked the 6.2 or the 5.0. When kb and whipple start releasing blower kits for our trucks we won't be having a "which truck is faster" conversation.

When driving conservatively the Eco gets amazing mpg. When hauling a load she gets it done there. And for now she can atleast keep up with almost any truck on the market.

I'm not trying to stroke Everyones ego, but any of the ford motors would have been a fine choice.

With that said, my truck is better then Everyones!

X2,What i really like about the EcoBoost is even driving it normal without being a lead foot it still runs good.But put your foot down and it gets up and goes.I have the 14.97 at 93.25 mph 1/4 mile timeslip to prove it,Later Mark.
 
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 12:00 PM
  #168  
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I'll tell ya one thing...my opinion and mine only; when the mods start hitting the street for the EB like intercoolers, intakes, and tuners/programmers, that thing will be a beast and nothing you do to a 6.2 short of forced induction will touch it.

One question I've searched for and seems to be currently unanswered (that I could find anyways) is how an EB, specifically stock, will perform on a lifted truck with big 'ol heavy wheels and tires??? I think the 6.2 will have an easier go of moving that around on a daily driver routine. Curious how much the EB runs into boost normal driving in that configuration thus really hurting the fuel mileage advantage it has stock?
 
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Old Dec 2, 2011 | 02:48 PM
  #169  
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if you get the eb you need to worry about how long it'll last. it has twin turbos on a V-6. nothing against it, but if you are pulling, you may want a little more nut under the hood if you get what i mean.
 
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Old Dec 2, 2011 | 03:23 PM
  #170  
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From: Long Island, NY
Originally Posted by Galaxy
One question I've searched for and seems to be currently unanswered (that I could find anyways) is how an EB, specifically stock, will perform on a lifted truck with big 'ol heavy wheels and tires??? I think the 6.2 will have an easier go of moving that around on a daily driver routine. Curious how much the EB runs into boost normal driving in that configuration thus really hurting the fuel mileage advantage it has stock?
If you go with a lift and bigger tires the fuel will suffer a lot. I hit 21.8 mpg Wednesday and I noticed just accelerating a little effected the fuel mileage. I have the FX4 with 3.73 eb. (stock wheels and not leveled yet, screw) If you know you are going to lift it I personally would go with the 6.2l.
 
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Old Dec 2, 2011 | 05:31 PM
  #171  
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Originally Posted by Galaxy
I'll tell ya one thing...my opinion and mine only; when the mods start hitting the street for the EB like intercoolers, intakes, and tuners/programmers, that thing will be a beast and nothing you do to a 6.2 short of forced induction will touch it.
Right, but that's comparing N/A to boosted. Boost the 6.2L and it will walk the EB at half throttle. No replacement for displacement.

I don't even know if your statement is totally true though. Ford had the 6.2L making 500hp N/A in the Raptor Baja race truck.
 
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Old Dec 3, 2011 | 12:14 AM
  #172  
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From: Rowlett, TX
Originally Posted by 1997 lariat 4.6
if you get the eb you need to worry about how long it'll last. it has twin turbos on a V-6. nothing against it, but if you are pulling, you may want a little more nut under the hood if you get what i mean.
If the V-10 engine were more popular, would it make you question the ability of the V-8 because it has two less cylinders?

You know, the little 4 cylinders on the market live for a lot longer than most of the V-8's. How can that be? Smaller is bad, right???
 
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Old Dec 3, 2011 | 02:28 AM
  #173  
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Originally Posted by TX Chris
If the V-10 engine were more popular, would it make you question the ability of the V-8 because it has two less cylinders?

You know, the little 4 cylinders on the market live for a lot longer than most of the V-8's. How can that be? Smaller is bad, right???
His statement was bad, but yours isnt much better. The reason 4 bangers seem to last longer is they have half as much parts in the block to fail. Less parts, less failure.
 
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Old Dec 3, 2011 | 10:05 AM
  #174  
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From: Cabot, AR
Originally Posted by Gerrard155
His statement was bad, but yours isnt much better. The reason 4 bangers seem to last longer is they have half as much parts in the block to fail. Less parts, less failure.
Also, they tend to be inline motors so there is less wear on one side of the cylinder wall that happens in a V configuration due to the weight of the piston. They also typically are not made with performance in mind and have low compression and aren't made to rev all the time. Look at the back end of a civic that someone riced out and tried to make more power out of, it will be covered in burnt oil and smoke like freight train.

Originally Posted by 1997 lariat 4.6
if you get the eb you need to worry about how long it'll last. it has twin turbos on a V-6. nothing against it, but if you are pulling, you may want a little more nut under the hood if you get what i mean.
Have you even looked at the torque curves for the two motors? The EB makes more power down low where it is needed when pulling something of substantial weight. The 6.2 doesn't catch up till around 4000RPMs. It peaks a little bit higher but how often and for how long do you keep your motor reved over 4k when pulling?
 
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Old Dec 3, 2011 | 12:34 PM
  #175  
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Since there's a few thousand difference in $$, guess that doesn't matter, so get the 6.2L and throw a hennessy twin turbo on it! 810hp!
 
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Old Dec 4, 2011 | 06:48 AM
  #176  
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The only reason anybody should choose the eco over the 6.2 is because of the gas mileage. If fuel economy is a concern then by all means, go eco. But if it's not, then go 6.2. Eco owners get all defensive when people say anything negative about their precious engines.
 
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Old Dec 4, 2011 | 07:53 AM
  #177  
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From: minnesota - ubetcha
Originally Posted by chris_bryan_89
The only reason anybody should choose the eco over the 6.2 is because of the gas mileage. If fuel economy is a concern then by all means, go eco. But if it's not, then go 6.2. Eco owners get all defensive when people say anything negative about their precious engines.
Not the ONLY...Read a couple posts above - more torue at low rpms

Lets also add, Cheaper, old technology, weight, etc.

Its a fine engine but the point is its not better unless your need make it better. Same as any engine or rear ratio. Otherwise they would only offer one.
 
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Old Dec 4, 2011 | 07:59 AM
  #178  
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I couldn't justify the additional cost of the 6.2 over the Ecoboost, even on a $45k truck.
 
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Old Dec 4, 2011 | 11:46 PM
  #179  
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From: Illinois
Originally Posted by mSaLL150
Right, but that's comparing N/A to boosted. Boost the 6.2L and it will walk the EB at half throttle. No replacement for displacement.
No duh! Did you have to research that all night to come up with that?

The comparison is new technology versus old technology. There is a replacement for displacement. The EcoBoost proves it. It's not the game of taking a small engine and one almost twice the size and boosting them the same and saying "My boosted 6.2L will beat your puny 3.5L Eco. It is about offering an engine option that gives you better economy than a V-8 and gives you as good of performance.
 
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Old Dec 5, 2011 | 02:25 AM
  #180  
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I'm still hoping for a ecoboost 6.2.
 
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