Going through my memory and was thinking about this, and trying to remember this through my life. My recalls are I prefer high rpm torque engines for multiple purposes. I have driven many low rpm torque engines, and honestly it's not my liking. My first truck was a 88 ranger with a 2.3 5spd in1989 when i turned 16 and got my license. In 1994 I bought my 94 3.0 5spd new. What I became used to.
As time went on I drove alot of foxbody 5.0 autos and manual transmissions. Engines were stock, also drove alot of built up foxbody 5 0..etc. Including my dad's old 94 5.0 f150 he had for years until he passed a few years ago.
We all have our reasons for which we prefer. It will wether on our own experiences from daily driver to off roading and weather. I have do all of it whether driving or being a passenger.
My favorite engines are 2.3 88-97, 3.0 92-97, 5.0 88-00.
Would like to hear all of trs do you prefer high or low torque engines? List what are your favorite..would like to hear your reasons
I chose my three due to I have been around those the most and have seen many times what these can do. From the Aerostar, f series 5.0, bronco, Taurus, ranger, explorer 5.0 my favorite
Would like to hear your choices. Doing some memory exercises for myself from my brain injury. Been having more memory problems, doing this to help.
This is ford engines only
best ford offering though technically not really a ford engine....
7.3 idi factory ats turbo first choice. best power and economy and cost effective to keep running and diy the whole damn thing...dumber then a bag of hammer heads and as reliable as can be expected.
then the 6.7 scorpion....an actual ford engine.
ford only....hmmmm...for gas engines...
its hard to say overall, because i like low, mid, and high depending on application....what is the primary use???.
overall...
now...this is strictly speaking stock with maybe average monkey diy bolt ons...
for a heavy work truck....
.....hands down godzilla.....even know they are at a 100 percent failure in the work fleet.....it is the most ridiculous naturally aspirated gas engine in a work truck I have ever used. its just kewl......how it works.
before that...i would have said the v10 dodge hd setup....the 3 valve 5.4 i liked better then any 460 as well..(stock 460.....
stock!! very important distinction...) likely that was mostly the transmission and cams allowing for the preference. i am amazed that something with half the cubes so easily outperformed per a certain application. but...your adding extreme complexity to get there........very cheap and easy mods to a 460, gets them to decent usability....and most importantly...longevity.... the cost of ownership for repair and reliability with the 460 is hard to beat. at the end of the day...thats all that matters for poor boys.
godzilla has some flaws to be sure.... it does ratio out in my application pulling 14k....which is something that does bug me...but that is in the oem programming to keep the powertrain alive for warranty....
which clearly they failed with the oiling system....
I suspect it was mostly covid parts sourcing because the lifter manufacturing issues were not caught on from 2019......and I am banking on that assessment...that and they want these engines to die before 250k....so for now....questionable...but we will see.
for a commuter ranger....i would be tempted to the mazda L. clearly the best engine that ever was laid in the frame rails of a ranger. for stock rbv....in commuter primary where you are not exceeding rated capacity...the power and economy is outstanding and engine life. i would not call it high rpm....likely rate it mid.
more importantly....you can boost it a bit and get double the power sometimes before 1 full atmosphere. i have seen 10ish psi get 260 plus rwhp depending on fueling scenario....if i remember right that particular truck went from 12x rwhp to 26x....and they were expecting mid 220s to low 230s rwhp. THAT....got my full attention. they quickly earned my respect not long after that watching ford focus shitboxes whoop the fawk out of mid build 5.0 mustangs.
then there are the cyclones. these can cover everything in n/a.... low....mid... and high rpm.
in ecoboost form, they are a low rpm engine.
depending on configuration.
this tiny little 3.5 liter thing bitch slaps the godzilla or anything ever, so far, in any half ton to one ton civillian pick up truck vehicle.... I have a Powerboost...150. it needs a 1 ton rear end...because it is so powerful, in normal use, they destroy the super bad ass axle they come with stock. so ford engineering...sux. they just suck. trust me. i have to fix those billions of dollars and years of r@d and thousands of thousands of geniuses bullshit regularly. yeah....me. captain GED.
in N/A form ....the cyclone is an all rpm busy body, with power on top really coming on.....its response to tuning and boltons is so underknown.
these little guys have supplanted the 351 windsor for me....(remember stock with diy average monkey boltons) they are the modern windsor for me. they are complex and need higher oil change intervals from oem recommendation....but they are just awesome if you take care of them. they meet or exceed 302 windsor and 351 capacity in the light duty 1/2 ton work truck...
and if you want to push air through them....you just push air through them and tune. they will survive at a higher limit then the 302.
compared to anything from the 90s and back....there is just no comparison.
they have weaknesses....the front drive version is a train wreck to do water pumps ect....and they are variable cams...so...lots of stuff can go wrong....and later units add complexity with the various injection types ect...
but they can do it all when looking at it from an rbv application. they are cheap...and can utilize the 6r80 transmission. this swapped into an old school ranger is a venerable combination that does it all.
so you dont just need to pick. just look at the stuff that is out there carefully.