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Phoenix Engines V6 For The Ram? Rate Topic: -----

#1 Guest_tundrakiller_*

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Posted 24 December 2008 - 05:06 PM

If you were a registered user, you would not be seeing this!

has anyone heard any news of the ram getting the 3.6 phoenix v6 rated at 280hp i hope so the 3.7 is way out classed.
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#2 User is offline   oh2o 

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Posted 25 December 2008 - 04:09 AM

View Posttundrakiller, on Dec 24 2008, 02:06 PM, said:

has anyone heard any news of the ram getting the 3.6 phoenix v6 rated at 280hp i hope so the 3.7 is way out classed.

Not sure exactly when yet (either 2010 or 2011 MY), but the Ram is on the list for a 3.6L or two (base 3.6L and DI 3.6L). And later down the road, a V8 Phoenix :)
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#3 User is offline   superduckie5000 

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Posted 25 December 2008 - 10:16 PM

Someday in a Couple of MY's.

TMD
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#4 User is offline   Erik Latranyi 

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Posted 26 December 2008 - 09:51 AM

If the Phoenix engines give the Ram decent torque and best-in-class fuel economy, then expect to see it.
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#5 User is offline   superduckie5000 

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Posted 26 December 2008 - 11:04 AM

If you were a registered user, you would not be seeing this!

A Question Will the Phoenix Engines Be the Only V-6's????????????????????????

And the Answer Too.



TMD
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#6 User is offline   BR Miller 

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Posted 26 December 2008 - 02:30 PM

There's a rumor at AprilFools.com that the Phoenix is being canceled in favor of a turbocharged version of the 2.4. The 3.3 will be revived and will become the standard high-end engine. :lol:
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#7 User is offline   superduckie5000 

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Posted 26 December 2008 - 08:43 PM

Have You got Any Idea How OLD Much of the Tooling is for the 3.3L & 3.8L Is ??????????????

And How Long It Was Run 24/7 for Years On End !

In a Couple Years I WILL Be at the END of It's Useful Life !

Kind'a Like a Car With 300K Miles with the Orginal Engine & Trans.

The Mad Duck
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#8 User is offline   93XJMOPARMAN 

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Posted 27 December 2008 - 01:29 PM

View Postsuperduckie5000, on Dec 26 2008, 07:43 PM, said:

Have You got Any Idea How OLD Much of the Tooling is for the 3.3L & 3.8L Is ??????????????

And How Long It Was Run 24/7 for Years On End !

In a Couple Years I WILL Be at the END of It's Useful Life !

Kind'a Like a Car With 300K Miles with the Orginal Engine & Trans.

The Mad Duck



Looks like allpar needs to get a MOPAR superduckie5000 master rebuild kit. :lol:
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#9 User is offline   Wizard 

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Posted 27 December 2008 - 05:19 PM

If you were a registered user, you would not be seeing this!

MadDuck is right on the age of tooling of 3.3/3.8 age. Designed and used since '89; startup and manufacturing for 1990 introducation on caravans and other vehicles.

Now almost 20 years. Gee.

Cheers, Wizard
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#10 User is offline   CommanderFish 

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Posted 28 December 2008 - 02:58 PM

View Postoh2o, on Dec 25 2008, 03:09 AM, said:

Not sure exactly when yet (either 2010 or 2011 MY), but the Ram is on the list for a 3.6L or two (base 3.6L and DI 3.6L). And later down the road, a V8 Phoenix :)


Question: Why are they even bothering with non-DI Phoenix's?

(Unless they're for everywhere except NA and Europe, I just don't see the point)
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#11 User is offline   goodnightjohnwayne 

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Posted 28 December 2008 - 03:33 PM

View PostCommanderFish, on Dec 28 2008, 02:58 PM, said:

Question: Why are they even bothering with non-DI Phoenix's?

(Unless they're for everywhere except NA and Europe, I just don't see the point)


There's still a significant price differential between port and direct injection. Moreover, there is a noticeable clicking noise from a direct injected gasoline engine, and direct injection engines tend to use a little more oil that conventional engines.
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#12 User is offline   Wizard 

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Posted 28 December 2008 - 03:57 PM

What are you gibbering about? Sounds like you are not talking about phoenix engines at all. You were referring to recent other makers who have DI engine for last few years. We're talking about chrysler phoneix IN PARTICULAR and we still do not have the information and chrysler is keeping this lid strapped down really good.

The ONLY difference is the location of injection of fuel, extra oil comsumpation have NOTHING to do with that, this sounds like a maker have DESIGN issues with rings or piston even the block casting design. For example saturn 2.0L engines in past has the oil burning issues.

Cheers, Wizard

This post has been edited by Wizard: 28 December 2008 - 04:00 PM

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#13 User is offline   Mike V. 

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Posted 29 December 2008 - 10:25 AM

View Postgoodnightjohnwayne, on Dec 28 2008, 02:33 PM, said:

There's still a significant price differential between port and direct injection. Moreover, there is a noticeable clicking noise from a direct injected gasoline engine, and direct injection engines tend to use a little more oil that conventional engines.


You know this is true for the Phoenix engine? Please give us your "credible source or independent testor" since you insist it from everyone else... but you never have one.

Comparing the GM 2.0 DI to the Phoenix is an apples and oranges comparison... especially since there is probably no way in Heck that you have actually seen or heard a Phoenix DI actually running in front of you.

Mike

View Postsuperduckie5000, on Dec 26 2008, 07:43 PM, said:

Have You got Any Idea How OLD Much of the Tooling is for the 3.3L & 3.8L Is ??????????????

And How Long It Was Run 24/7 for Years On End !

In a Couple Years I WILL Be at the END of It's Useful Life !

Kind'a Like a Car With 300K Miles with the Orginal Engine & Trans.

The Mad Duck


Sadly, as terrible as everyone claims the 3.3 and the 3.8 to be, they take a licking and keep on ticking. This includes all the manufacturing equipment too. ;) Not bad for 20+ years if you include all the design and testing phases of the engines.

Mike

This post has been edited by Mike V.: 29 December 2008 - 10:27 AM

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#14 User is offline   superduckie5000 

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Posted 29 December 2008 - 12:41 PM

A Little More On the 3.3/3.L Tooling. There are 2 Block Lines for these Engines. Dept 621 & 521. 621 Was Put in as the a Combo 3.3/3.8L Line. It has Had a Number of Upgrades, Machines that had Major Rebuilds, and Machines that Were Out Right Replaced.
621 Has a New Final Hone ( For Better Bores To Help Help Meet Emissions Requirements), a New/Upgraded Final Bore, Major Rebuilt Rough Bore & a New OP 40 (The First Transfer Machine in the Line). This Was All Done in the Last 4 to 5 Years. This Line Now Make 3.8L Engines Because it Can Out Produce Dept 521 that Now Makes 3.3L Engines. Dept 521 Started Life as the 3.5L OHC Block Line. It Was Converted to 3.8L OHV Line after the End of the Iron 3.5L. This Line Now Makes 3.3L Blocks. It Has Been Upgraded With Many of the Same Items as Dept 621. There Was a New 3.8L Crank Line Installed about 8 Years Ago. The Old Crank Line Got New Final Lappers (For Better Micro Finish) and a Number of Rebuilds & Upgrades. 2 Nice Landis Finish Main Bearing Grinders That Were About 1 1/2 Years Old Were Removed From the Old 2.0L Neon Line And Reworked for the 3.3/3.8L's Old Crank Line. That was Done Last Year. The Cam Line Had the Lobe Mills Rebuild In House and Helped Cam Quality A LOT. Dept. 638 (3.3/3.8L Assembly Line) Had Extensive Work Done Before the RT Mini Van and Jeep Umlimited Came Out. The 4.0L Alum. Engine is Make on the Old Rebuilt 3.5L Alum Engine Tooling & Assy. Line. However, They did Put in a New Finish Crank Line & Reused the Old New Final Lapper. But thats a Long Story About the "New Old" Crank Lapper. Someone Else Can Tell the Story About the Train Wreck. Also No One Got Got Hurt in That Event Thank God.

The Mad Duck
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#15 User is offline   ShadowRider 

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Posted 29 December 2008 - 04:01 PM

View Postsuperduckie5000, on Dec 29 2008, 12:41 PM, said:

A Little More On the 3.3/3.L Tooling. There are 2 Block Lines for these Engines. Dept 621 & 521. 621 Was Put in as the a Combo 3.3/3.8L Line. It has Had a Number of Upgrades, Machines that had Major Rebuilds, and Machines that Were Out Right Replaced.
621 Has a New Final Hone ( For Better Bores To Help Help Meet Emissions Requirements), a New/Upgraded Final Bore, Major Rebuilt Rough Bore & a New OP 40 (The First Transfer Machine in the Line). This Was All Done in the Last 4 to 5 Years. This Line Now Make 3.8L Engines Because it Can Out Produce Dept 521 that Now Makes 3.3L Engines. Dept 521 Started Life as the 3.5L OHC Block Line. It Was Converted to 3.8L OHV Line after the End of the Iron 3.5L. This Line Now Makes 3.3L Blocks. It Has Been Upgraded With Many of the Same Items as Dept 621. There Was a New 3.8L Crank Line Installed about 8 Years Ago. The Old Crank Line Got New Final Lappers (For Better Micro Finish) and a Number of Rebuilds & Upgrades. 2 Nice Landis Finish Main Bearing Grinders That Were About 1 1/2 Years Old Were Removed From the Old 2.0L Neon Line And Reworked for the 3.3/3.8L's Old Crank Line. That was Done Last Year. The Cam Line Had the Lobe Mills Rebuild In House and Helped Cam Quality A LOT. Dept. 638 (3.3/3.8L Assembly Line) Had Extensive Work Done Before the RT Mini Van and Jeep Umlimited Came Out. The 4.0L Alum. Engine is Make on the Old Rebuilt 3.5L Alum Engine Tooling & Assy. Line. However, They did Put in a New Finish Crank Line & Reused the Old New Final Lapper. But thats a Long Story About the "New Old" Crank Lapper. Someone Else Can Tell the Story About the Train Wreck. Also No One Got Got Hurt in That Event Thank God.

The Mad Duck

what year did Dept 521 become Dept 821? I know it was before I got there in '99.
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#16 User is offline   Wizard 

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Posted 29 December 2008 - 05:27 PM

I know these 3.3/3.8L are very good engines.

And, goodnightjohnwayne, out with the bias. And state your reasons. And I saw you have strong bias for western vehicles and small engines. Why? You have to consider whole thing not just for western stuff.

Cheers, Wizard
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#17 User is offline   eekamouse 

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Posted 30 December 2008 - 05:22 PM

View PostMike V., on Dec 29 2008, 11:25 AM, said:

Sadly, as terrible as everyone claims the 3.3 and the 3.8 to be, they take a licking and keep on ticking. This includes all the manufacturing equipment too. ;) Not bad for 20+ years if you include all the design and testing phases of the engines.

Mike


Actually, I know several people who had terrible problems with the 3.3-3.8 engines. Granted they were high miles, near 200,000 miles, but the aluminum heads, and iron block strike again. I don't know what it was with Chrysler's choice in aluminum back then, but pourous transaxle cases, and lots of heat expansion and cooling, caused a lot of warp on the heads resulting in blown head gaskets.

I hope the phoenix rises in the Dakota before the Ram.
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#18 User is offline   Jim Z 

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Posted 30 December 2008 - 05:53 PM

Quote

Actually, I know several people who had terrible problems with the 3.3-3.8 engines.


it's only anecdotal, but the only common problem with the 3.3/3.8 I ran into while wrenching was the tendency for the accessory belt tensioner mounting bolt to snap.
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#19 User is offline   ShadowRider 

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Posted 30 December 2008 - 07:25 PM

View Posteekamouse, on Dec 30 2008, 05:22 PM, said:

Actually, I know several people who had terrible problems with the 3.3-3.8 engines. Granted they were high miles, near 200,000 miles, but the aluminum heads, and iron block strike again. I don't know what it was with Chrysler's choice in aluminum back then, but pourous transaxle cases, and lots of heat expansion and cooling, caused a lot of warp on the heads resulting in blown head gaskets.

I hope the phoenix rises in the Dakota before the Ram.

Not that many years ago a 100,000 miles was about average for an engine to go before it needed major work so I would say that the 3.3 and 3.8's are holding up just fine. All it would take to warp the aluminum heads would be for the coolant to get rather low. Not unheard of on a high mileage minivan.

This post has been edited by ShadowRider: 30 December 2008 - 10:09 PM

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#20 User is offline   Truth 

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Post icon  Posted 30 December 2008 - 09:52 PM

Phoenix Engines absolutely coming for RAM in 'bout 2 Years
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