Author Archive

Who am I?

by Peter Treydte
Friday, April 29th, 2005

I said in an earlier blog that I was a Ford guy. Today I think I am changing my identity a bit. I think I am starting to consider myself a Diesel guy. I drive a gas-powered F-150 every day and keep thinking about what my fuel costs are going to be this summer. I would sure love to have a small diesel-powered car to commute with. Unfortunately being in California, it doesn’t look like that will be available to me anytime soon. The only readily-available diesels in this Left Coast state are full-size trucks. I can’t quite justify the purchase of a diesel pickup right now, and even if I did, I don’t think I would be saving much in fuel costs. I am currently getting 14-16 MPG at a fuel cost of around $2.40/gal (and that’s optimistic), which works out to an operating cost of about 16 cents a mile. Our Test Group Manager commutes in a Duramax dually and reports an average of about 18 miles to the gallon. At a fuel cost of $2.50/gal, that’s a little less than 14 cents a mile. A savings indeed, but not quite enough to justify the purchase of a $40,000 vehicle in my situation.

Now what if there was a diesel-powered car for around $13,500 that got around 55 MPG? That brings us down to 4-1/2 cents per mile. Now we’re talking. That car is available in Canada. It’s the Smart car. We had an opportunity to drive one that Bosch brought to the states for show-and-tell. It was cool, but so far, it’s not available here. I say, bring them on! With that car, I would be a full-fledged card carrying Diesel guy.

A Trip To The Toy Shop

by Peter Treydte
Thursday, April 21st, 2005

One of the things that I like doing sometime during the workweek is to wander through the Banks Race Shop. It is really an amazing place. I can’t think of any other place in the world where I could find high-flow intake manifolds for diesel engines being developed, turbochargers being mounted on a V-12 tank engine and a one-of-a-kind diesel road race truck being built from the ground up… oh and by the way, just a few feet away is the world’s fastest pickup truck powered by a Cummins ISB engine.

Don’t think of it like a NASCAR race shop where you would see a half dozen or more cars being prepped for specific tasks. A lot of people refer to it as a toy shop, but it is really much more than that. It is a research and development facility of the highest order. There is a lot of talent working in the room too. The other day I was looking as some custom aluminum manifolds with welds that looked like they were done by a robot. They were actually done by Michael Markowitz, one of our newest fabricators. As far as I know he is fully human. He clearly has more metal working capability in his little finger than I will ever have.

I guess one of the reasons that I love it so much is because I love racing. What better way to develop new ideas and expand automotive concepts? That is really what racing is all about. And on top of that, its fun.

Blue Oval Fever

by Peter Treydte
Friday, April 15th, 2005

I’m a Ford guy. I can’t explain why, except to say that from the time I was a young kid I have always felt more partial to the Blue Oval brand than others. It could be because my dad owned more Fords than other brands. I was one of 6 kids, so we always had large vehicles. I remember going to church in an early 70’s blue Econoline with a 3-on-the-tree shifter. I never got to drive that one, but I remember logging a lot of miles in it. It was replaced by a 1982 brown Econoline powered by a 289 V-8 with a variable venturi carburetor… not one of Ford’s better ideas. This one I did get to drive. When I was a junior higher I convinced my dad to let me move the van from the street to the driveway to put it away for the evening. This became a ritual for me. My dad took me to get my learner’s permit in that van and I went on my first real date in it. It was not what I would call a cool van either, at least not in the sense that van’s were cool at some point in Americana. (Whoa, did I just admit that I was a “van guy”?!?) I also learned the importance of engine oil with that van. Did you know that the engine stops running after a while if it doesn’t have oil?

It could be because my grandfather drove a beat up green 70’s F-100 Ranger (full-size truck, but that was the badging then), and we went everywhere in that truck as well, most notably to the dairy farm to pick up fertilizer (read manure) for my grandparent’s expansive yard. To a young kid, that was an exciting trip. I rebuilt the engine in that truck for an engine class in college. I also inherited it for a while after my grandfather passed away, and had every intention of completely restoring it, but you know how those projects go and the beat-up green hulk didn’t fit my wife’s idea of a good look for the front of our house. It’s still in the family, now parked in front of my cousin’s house.

It could be because the first vehicle that I ever bought with my own money was a 1983 Ranger. I bought it from a friend who was a manager of a local pest company. When I got it both front fenders had been banged up and the brakes were shot. I did a lot to that truck, my favorite being the installation of a turbo 2.3L from a T-Bird Turbo Coupe of the same year.

It could be because my first job in the automotive world was with a company that built Ford 4-cylinder racing engines. I started by sweeping the floors, and learned everything there was to know about the Ford Pinto engines, both the 2.0L and the 2.3L. By the time I left I was building the engines and running them on the dyno. We could get 300 horsepower out of a normally aspirated 2.3, bored and stroked to around 3 liters. I got to experience all forms of racing from off-road to circle track to boats. I still tinker with those engines on occasion.

There have been many Fords in my life including 3 Mustangs, 3 Explorers, 3 Rangers, one Escort, a Tempo, the two vans I mentioned earlier and the F-150 that I drive now. But that doesn’t mean that I have avoided GMs altogether. The first car that I ever owned as my own was a 76 Nova 4-door (cream exterior with plaid interior) which was given to me by my aunt. I drove my other grandfather’s 72 2-door Nova a lot (another 3-on-the-tree), my dad had an S-10 for a while that was kind of fun, and the high school boat of all times was the 76 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser station wagon… remember the rear facing seat?

I say all this, and I am going to leave today driving my friend’s 2004 LLY GMC Duramax pickup truck, in my opinion one of the best diesel packages available. In my job I have the distinct benefit of driving numerous brand’s and types of vehicles. There are many impressive vehicles under the GM, Dodge and, dare I say, import banners that I deal with on a regular basis. So am I still a Ford guy? Deep down, I guess I am, but I can’t explain why.