1985 F.250 4x4 Pulling Truck
#1
1985 F.250 4x4 Pulling Truck
Im building a sled pulling truck, its got the 300 6 with the 4 speed standard tranny, high low 4 wheel drive and 4.11 gears, its going to get lincoln lockers front and rear because it will be trailered everywhere. Its got a hydrallic clutch. What do you think about this, i really do not want to hear put a V8 in it. That is way out of the question, i want to show people what the 300 can do, so anyway what can i do to keep it cool, this truck will be used in truck pulles, (bumper to bumper) and these 300s get hot real easily, im thinking 4 core rad, and dual electric fans, any1 have a cheaper way to keep it cool
#3
#5
Originally Posted by Ford-Trucker84537
But if any of you diesel guys want to chain em up for dibs on speaking in here, im more then game,
What mods have you/are you planning on doing to the engine?
Tim
#6
Originally Posted by Ford-Trucker84537
i dont see 1 for sled pulling in any of the gas engine forums, but u should take into consideration the 300 is most like a diesel. But if any of you diesel guys want to chain em up for dibs on speaking in here, im more then game,
#7
once you get to the point you can turn over all four good, I think weight is the most important thing in truck/truck pulling, along with durability and of course your hitch point height in relationship to your foe. with your truck you will never be heavy enough(or have enough tq) to take on oil burners, even old ones. I would stick to gassers, I pulled many a chevy 1500 4x4 backwards with my old *****ty dodge ramcharger, it had a wipped stock 318 in it. I pulled mostly on black top, low range 31x10.50s about 150hp I would hold the brake with it locked in low/low until they started too spin, then let up on the brake and floor it ! It would go wwaaaaa and barley spin the right front and pull them backwards, but they were all empty 1500s I simply outweighed them.
Last edited by lowet; 07-20-2007 at 07:17 PM.
Trending Topics
#8
#9
#11
Originally Posted by 79superduty
WOW! a 6.0 with 650 hp and 1400 tq.driven daily?
Mine ain't all that either. There's lots of other guys out there with higher numbers that are daily drivers as well. Just not that many members in this forum as stupid as me.
ON EDIT: Those numbers are an estimate currently. I dyno'd with the stock turbo at 586.4HP and 1204 torque. New numbers will be coming as soon as I can!
Last edited by 6L PWR; 07-21-2007 at 12:10 PM.
#12
All you need power for in pulling in turning the wheels, i got 4.11s and with that 300 in 4 low im not worried about not being able to turn the wheels, not all to worried about being able to get the truck heavy enough, its got 2 sets of 3/4 ton leafs on both sides in the back + a helper spring, i can probably put anything i ant back there to a resonable point and it wont squat and i have a capfor it so no one can see what i got in the back
#13
Originally Posted by Ford-Trucker84537
All you need power for in pulling in turning the wheels, i got 4.11s and with that 300 in 4 low im not worried about not being able to turn the wheels, not all to worried about being able to get the truck heavy enough, its got 2 sets of 3/4 ton leafs on both sides in the back + a helper spring, i can probably put anything i ant back there to a resonable point and it wont squat and i have a capfor it so no one can see what i got in the back
#14
Originally Posted by Ford-Trucker84537
All you need power for in pulling in turning the wheels, i got 4.11s and with that 300 in 4 low im not worried about not being able to turn the wheels, not all to worried about being able to get the truck heavy enough, its got 2 sets of 3/4 ton leafs on both sides in the back + a helper spring, i can probably put anything i ant back there to a resonable point and it wont squat and i have a capfor it so no one can see what i got in the back
You need power and torque that won't bog down under heavy load.
You need weight to apply said power and torque.
You need strong drivetrain components to keep the power and torque applied.
Whether the pulls are sanctioned or not find out what the compation rules are. They will dictate how you need to build. In a light weight street gas truck class, a properly built 300 has a chance of being competative. If the class allows big block v8's forget about being competative and plan on just having fun.
#15
Whether the pulls are sanctioned or not find out what the compation rules are. They will dictate how you need to build. In a light weight street gas truck class, a properly built 300 has a chance of being competative. If the class allows big block v8's forget about being competative and plan on just having fun.[/QUOTE]
This is really going to be your underlying issue. If you are pulling in a "stock" class, I would say why not the 300!!! It's cool to see guys trying different combinations, but once you start playing with modified gas trucks you are going to run into some serious pullers. It is not simply having hp/tq and being able to spin the tires. You have to figure in engine rpm's, gearing, tire size, wheel speed, track speed and weight distribution to name a few things. Depending on where you are competing, it can get very technical. I've seen plenty of guys with tons of power that can not compete. They do not have all of the other aspects figured out.
As far as your hydraulic clutch question goes, I would run it. We have an 83 Ford that is running a 466 with the hydraulic clutch. As long as you are not wanting to "slip" the clutch too much coming out of the hole, it will hold. If you are planning on serious performance/pulling, you would be better off to convert it to a high performance pedal/fork style application.
This is really going to be your underlying issue. If you are pulling in a "stock" class, I would say why not the 300!!! It's cool to see guys trying different combinations, but once you start playing with modified gas trucks you are going to run into some serious pullers. It is not simply having hp/tq and being able to spin the tires. You have to figure in engine rpm's, gearing, tire size, wheel speed, track speed and weight distribution to name a few things. Depending on where you are competing, it can get very technical. I've seen plenty of guys with tons of power that can not compete. They do not have all of the other aspects figured out.
As far as your hydraulic clutch question goes, I would run it. We have an 83 Ford that is running a 466 with the hydraulic clutch. As long as you are not wanting to "slip" the clutch too much coming out of the hole, it will hold. If you are planning on serious performance/pulling, you would be better off to convert it to a high performance pedal/fork style application.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
f100beatertruck
1980 - 1986 Bullnose F100, F150 & Larger F-Series Trucks
5
02-15-2015 12:33 PM
fishmanndotcom
Other; Brakes, Electrical, Hitches, Weight Distribution & CDL Discussion
19
10-21-2004 11:59 PM