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Typical hours on engine?


alwaysFlOoReD

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TRS Banner 2012-2015
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Joined
Apr 13, 2009
Messages
15,102
City
Airdrie, Alberta, Canada
Vehicle Year
'06, '11
Engine
3.0 V6
Transmission
Automatic
My new to me 2006 dodge ram 1500 has the running hours on the odometer. 4400 hours at 200,000 km (124,000 miles). Is that a normal amount of hours for that mileage?
 
I've never had a Hobbs meter installed on any of my vehicles, so I have no idea.
 
200,000km divided by 4,400 hours = 45kph. So yea sounds normal to me. When you factor in idle time, it was probably a healthy mix of highway/city miles.
 
My truck has 70,000 miles but probably the same amount of hours on it. :icon_rofl:
 
The Wireline (oilfield blasting) credo literally is "poppin' caps and takin' naps"

Most of my work trucks have an inordinate amount of idle time on them, so 4000+ seems reasonable to me.
 
Interesting point. For those of us with 4x4's that don't get driven a lot and spend a lot of time slowly crawling trails and idling, maybe an hour meter would be a better basis for maintenance as opposed to miles or months.
 
Interesting point. For those of us with 4x4's that don't get driven a lot and spend a lot of time slowly crawling trails and idling, maybe an hour meter would be a better basis for maintenance as opposed to miles or months.

This is why I do maintenance based on time and dont pay much attention to miles. My last oil change on the ranger was just under 3k miles but it was almost a year. I rarely wear the tread out on tires either, they just get old and start dry rotting.
 
37552

This is from a county government vehicle, so it’s worse then a company owned vehicle, which would be way worse then a privately owned vehicle.
IIRC This is a 2017 f250.
 
That's alot of naps...
 
I do my preventative maintenance based on time as well. Oil changes and whatever is on the check lists from the owner's manual every spring and fall. I do record the mileage when I write down the date when it was done but I rarely bother to calculate how many miles that has been. Every April and October.

Just out of curiosity, I just checked. Last April was 3,969 miles and October 5,044 miles for the 2011 and 5,906 miles on the 2019 in November since I bought in June. Some of that has been drives across the State for SAR training and the girlfriend taking the 2019 to Florida to visit her sister while I was deployed. So, a bit early on the mileage side but it gives me a chance to look everything over real well after the winter brine bath and before the winter brine bath.
 
That’s not bad... 8hrs a day x 5 days a week x 52 weeks x 2 years (the truck was just over 2 years old when I took the pic) = 4160 hrs.
Its a supervisors truck, he gets 4 weeks vacation a year... 4weeks x 40 hrs x 2 years is 320hrs.
4160 - 320 = 3840hrs. He basically starts the truck every morning and doesn’t shut it off all day!
 
Imagine the fuel savings if they gave that supervisor a desk instead of a truck...
 
Imagine the fuel savings if they gave that supervisor a desk instead of a truck...
Every road supervisor has an assigned area of county roads they cover. They have to inspect their area everyday. Which means they drive quite a few miles a day... this is normal. The road dept supervisor trucks usually have a 4-5 year lifespan.
 

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