My Stratoliner has been updated! The most reliable motorcycles made.
Just something I noticed... they didn't put anyone in that commercial who didn't have grey hair! LOL. Not that grey hair is bad or anything but you'd think they would at least give a marketing nod to one younger rider. LOL.
...but they did start off by saying that if you told a Cummins driver that his engine was loud, he'd probably smile and say "Thank you."
Yes. And I was literally multi-quoting that to say...
True, but the biggest place where that comes into place is the drive-thru intercom, lol. I remember seeing everyone with the 7.3L/6.0L PowerStroke or Cummins guys automatically shutting off the engine when pulling up to order at a drive thru, because they could never be heard over the engine. The 6.4L PS and DuraMax guys could normally leave 'em running because they idled much more quietly. That is about the only time where engine noise makes any difference, and it'd certainly be last on my list of concerns for buying a diesel truck, lol.
"If you don't have to shut it off in the drive thru, it's not a diesel worth owning." LOL!
Problem is, my computer has a turbo cool down mode and if I was just pushing the truck hard, you have to override it with a gas pedal tap after about ten seconds with the ignition switch off. And if I forget it's on, it turns into "Hang on a sec! I'm trying to shut it off!" "I can't hear you sir, can you shut off your engine?" "Hang ON...!"
Hahaha. I usually just park and go in. The dually is too wide for most drive thru's anyway.
But my '01 is hellaciously loud. Probably has more to do with the 4" exhaust from front to back than anything but man. It's obnoxious. Which, is fine by me.
Since the A/C decided to go out and I have not yet bothered to get it to the shop to look for the leak and get that dealt with, and I had someone ask if I could bring it to the office to help him get some stuff home a couple of days ago, I drove it old skool with the windows down. I quickly wished I had brought my Zulu 2s along. Hahahaha.
That's interesting. I never had to turn off my engine on my Cummins (or now on my 6.0 PowerStroke, which is significantly louder than they were new based on my memory) when at a drive-thru. But as you pointed out, that's the last consideration when buying a diesel truck.
The 6.4s, 6.7s, and later generation Duramaxes are way quieter, almost silent. Even the latest Cummins trucks are much quieter, which is one of the reasons why I don't like them as much.
I'm really surprised your Cummins was that quiet.
I think dirt bikes are a better way to get introduced to riding than street bikes. You come across a lot of varied terrain off-road, which forces you to learn to deal with changing conditions constantly. Lighter bikes that are more responsive, and it hurts slightly less when you fall on dirt/grass than it does on pavement.
That's how I learned. I ended up not being a street rider for long because the city is just insane. So I never really got into the culture and kept up on buying and riding bikes, but I loved riding in the dirt as a kid. Only time it ever ****ed me off was when I did an aggressive gear shift in really soft sand when unloaded on torque on some crappy 250 my dad had and locked the transmission up solid. Tossed me off at slow speed (was fine) and took a half hour of kicking the holy hell out of the shift peg to get that PoS out of second gear. No tools, middle of nowhere, and didn't weigh enough to do it. Haha. I was hot, angry, and didn't want to get on another dirt bike again for a long time after that day. Haha. Dad just chuckled that he wondered what was taking me so long. It was a big party weekend and we were out somewhere with friends who had a ski boat and plenty of dirt bike trails around and three or four bikes. But I had wandered off around 2PM to do a quick bike run solo around the trails and wasn't missed for a while. Hahahaha. Soooo mad. I forget what was wrong with that thing when we finally tore it down at home but I was young enough I was just handing dad tools back then.
Agreed with that pre-req. Our kids are going to learn to drive on old farm tractors which helps with the basics of clutch operation. If they're like Laurie and me, they'll want to learn to drive a stick anyway.
If they can even buy one.
The go kart commentary mixed with the Briggs and Stratton thread remind me of my youth. We all wanted a nice big Briggs and we'd find someone's dad to weld stuff together to make a buggy.
We all just had to save our money for a Briggs. Then we'd all tweak stuff on those buggies for hours. Then ride the hell out of them until the brakes failed.
Nothing else would do back then. But now Briggs sucks. Times change... sigh.