Which truck/engine is least expensive to fix VS most expensive.

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Petar, May 7, 2014.

  1. Petar

    Petar Bobtail Member

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    May 7, 2014
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    First time lookin to be owner operator, would be working in midwest area local/ regional runs. Please i need advice to which trucks and engines are cheaper and still good for the job compered to others that are more expensive. Thank u
     
    Last edited: May 7, 2014
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  3. Plan-B Trucking

    Plan-B Trucking Light Load Member

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    What will you be pulling? Dry van, tanker, etc?
    What will you be hauling?
     
  4. 201

    201 Road Train Member

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    Hi Petar, I've always had the older Big Cam Cummins motors, and they always did the job for me, and easy and somewhat cheap to repair, not the most powerful, however, I've heard people complain about the new Cummins motors. Cat is the best, most power, but very expensive to repair. I drove a Freightliner with a Series 60 Detroit that ran great. Good power, had like 830K miles on it and never opened up. I've heard of million mile S60's. Since you are in the Mid-West, with no major mountains, I'd probably go with the Detroit.
     
    Petar and Battle Born Thank this.
  5. heavyhaulerss

    heavyhaulerss Road Train Member

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    Series 60 detroit!
     
    Petar Thanks this.
  6. rollin coal

    rollin coal Road Train Member

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    Upfront costs for parts doesn't make or break the argument for which one costs less. The one that goes in the shop the least for mechanical issues is the one that costs less. I know a driver with an EGR 14L Detroit who always like to brag about how cheap his parts are. Thing is it always seems like there's issues with his motor. Don't have issues like that with mine. He always likes to ask me "what would that cost on a CAT".
     
    blairandgretchen, rank and Petar Thank this.
  7. marmonman

    marmonman Road Train Member

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    The truth of the matter is they are all expensive !!!

    When it comes right down to it you wont find 5000.00 difference in all of them when you go to buy one in the box .
    The difference in price comes in where you get the work done .

    This not the 70s and 80s there is no cheap full on inframes they will all run you between 20 and 25 grand for all major brands .
     
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  8. Old Man

    Old Man Road Train Member

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    It depends on what you break!
     
  9. Petar

    Petar Bobtail Member

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    May 7, 2014
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    Dry van , containers, around chicagoland area
     
  10. savage02

    savage02 Light Load Member

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    Find a tractor with a pre-emissions Detroit Diesel 12.7L Series 60.
     
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  11. rank

    rank Road Train Member

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    Rollin' Coal stole my answer. Most people will tell you that a 12.7 L Series 60 will be the cheapest to fix and they would probably be correct. Just about everyone can work on them. On the other hand, we have a 2001 6NZ C15 Cat with over a million miles and it has never been touched. I mean ZERO engine work....it has had an alternator...and maybe a turbo, but no engine work at all. Which one is cheaper to fix LOL?
     
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