Big SUV gas mileage Loophole Eliminated, but Pickups Keep On Truckin'
As nauseating as it is to pat George W. Bush on the back for anything, we should take solace at least in this: for SUVs and some passenger vans in the once un-regulated 8500lb and higher GVWR category, some new CAFE regulations will come into effect by 2011. This comes out of the March 29th 2006 rule issued by the NHTSA that also boosts light truck gas mileage from 22.5mpg to 24mpg. Unfortunately, for pickup trucks with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) above 8500lbs, usually referred to as 3/4 ton and 1 ton pickups, CAFE still doesn't apply at all. Its important to take note that the ½, ¾ and 1 ton nomenclature for pickup trucks hasnt denoted actual load bearing capacity since the 1930s, although these designations stubbornly hold on to this day. The actual payload capacity of a ½ ton full size truck is more like 1300lbs to 2000lbs. When the NHTSA news release came out, everyone from NPR to Automotive News just went ahead and edited GVWR down to gross weight or just "weight." The truth is, as morbidly obese as American pickup trucks have become, the 8500lb category includes the payload of the vehicle along with the net or so called "curb" weight. No Virginia, there is no 8500lb pickup...yet. But keeping the 8500lb GVWR cutoff for pickup trucks, let alone not boosting light truck gas mileage up to passenger car standards is particularly troubling when you look at pickup trucks from an historical perspective.
The C.A.F.E. enshrinement of size and weight as specifically truck attributes has absolutely no historical basis when you look at the pre C.A.F.E. era. In my book Horsepower War, I spend quite a bit of time proving that actually the opposite was true before C.A.F.E.; the heaviest vehicles were actually passenger cars, and pickups were once among the lightest vehicles Detroit made. A 1954 Chevy Bel Air hardtop coupe (the heaviest vehicle Chevy made other than the convertible)weighed around 3400lbs. The biggest Cadillac Eldorado weighed nearly 5000lbs, while a 54 Chevrolet pickup didnt even break over the 2700lb mark thats not payload thats the curb weight of the truck itself! By 1967 pickup weight had increased, but Fords F-100 pickup weighed about 3500lbs, while a Ford LTD full size sedan was well over 4000lbs.
In fact the F-150 model, along with the Supercab six passenger cab, came along in 1976 right after C.A.F.E. debuted. The F-150s entire reason for being was originally to push it over the 6000lb GVWR class, so it could continue to burn leaded fuel and therefore go without a catalytic converter. Chevrolet did something similar with a Big 10 version of its ostensibly light duty C-10 half ton pickup that same year. The Ford Supercab helped turn the so called commercial pickup into a passenger carrying conveyance. It is true that recreational uses for trucks were on the rise before C.A.F.E., but there was never a legitimate reason for NHTSA to mandate that trucks get lousy gas mileage. The loophole has helped to inflate truck size over the past 30 years. Now a 2006 F-150 long bed, regular cab 4x2 V8 is about 4800lbs. The more common Supercrew four door, 4x4 V8 model has grown to a morbidly obese 6000lbs thats well over the weight of two 1950s pickups.
The load carrying role of the pickup has shrunk as the passenger carrying part has grown. Chevy didnt even offer a back seat in ½ ton recreational pickups untill 1989. Now pickup makers have shrunken bed size down to a mere 5 feet on many models. Dodges Dakota pickup doesnt offer a long 8 foot bed anymore. In fact, now you cant even buy a regular cab model. You have to get either the extended cab or four door cab.
In addition to size, the halcyon days of the 50s and 60s had commercial vehicles, a.k.a. pickups, with far less horsepower than passenger cars. There was no V8 available on the 54 Chevy pickup at all, while the 54 Cadillac surged forward in the 50s horsepower race roughly doubling the power of the Chevy pickup. In 1967, the Ford F-series offered three engines only one of which was a V8, and it made only 200hp from a moderate 352 cubic inches (5.8 liters), about half the power of the mightiest engine available in the Ford passenger car lineup in 67 the 427 cubic inch (7 liter) V8. Its important to note that the 200hp 352 was also the biggest engine for the 1967 F-250, rated at 7500lbs GVWR, and the F-350, with up to 10,000 lbs GVWR with dual rear wheels and about a 5700lb payload. In 2006 the base engine on the F-150 makes 200hp. Even the smallest V8 engine in the 2006 Chevrolet Silverado makes 285hp. That level of horsepower was unheard of, even in the biggest, heaviest pickups those in the over 8500lb GVWR category - all through the 1960s 1970s, 1980s and even into the 1990s.
But arent todays pickups better than yesterdays? When it comes to people pampering, theres no comparing todays luxo trucks with the stark ones of yesterday, but measured in purely utilitarian terms of payload carrying capability, the answer is no. There are big differences in towing capacity, since the new models have so much more horsepower than those of a generation ago, but in purely commercial terms of carrying burdens, todays pickups havent improved much, not just in spite of C.A.F.E.s bow to light trucks hallowed commercial role, but partly because of it. How could that be? At first blush these ratings seemed to have improved over the years. The 1967 Ford GVWR rating was 5000lbs for the F-100, while the 2006 F-150 rates 6800lbs. However we must subtract the vehicles curb weight from the GVWR number to get our payload. Result? The 2006 6800lb GVWR F-150 only nets about 500lbs more payload than a comparable 1967 F-100. On the Supercrew four door that gets all the face time in TV ads, the biggest payload is 1500lbs nearly the same payload as the 67 F-100. All the extra body weight of the large 6 passenger cab subtracts from the trucks ability to do what pickups were originally intended to do before the loophole helped turned them into opulent luxury vehicles. Body weight is a hindrance to the actual payload carrying capacity of the pickup, not a help, and yet the NHTSA commercial rationale that heavy duty pickups have to weigh a lot and have massive engines has made them pound for pound at least, less utilitarian than they once were. Remember also that for commercial vehicles, excessive power isnt a virtue either. Every extra penny spent on fuel could have gone into the business owners wallet as profit.
Its interesting to note just how much these GVWR ratings seem to have progressed over the years. The current ½ ton, long bed, regular cab Chevy Silverado has a GVWR of 6400lbs, and a payload of 2000lbs. In 1951 the Chevy pickup rated just 4600lbs GVWR then again, it only weighed 2600lbs so basically, even though the GVWR has moved from 4600lbs to 6400lbs for ½ ton GM pickups over 50+ years, the payload has stayed roughly the same. Considering that the 8500lb GVWR has been pegged by C.A.F.E. rules and pickup body weight has been increasing for 50 years and lately at an even faster pace just put two and two together. Cant we easily predict that GM and Ford will introduce personal use trucks above the 8500lb GVWR loophole cutoff that arent really for commercial or load bearing use?
We dont have to. Its already happened. Currently GMC offers a heavy duty half ton model called the 1500HD. Remember, in 1976 a GVWR above 6000lbs was considered a heavy duty half ton now this modern heavy duty half ton pickup just happens to rate at 8600lbs - above the 8500lb loophole. Its interesting to note that it only comes in crew cab or four door form and with a short 6.5 foot bed the body style least suited to carry bulky loads. Its also telling that the bare bones interior known as the work truck package isnt even available. Even the Base trim isnt. It comes only in highline luxury trim with chrome wheels, leather wrapped steering wheel, overhead console and power accessories, yet this truck is already getting Uncle Sams stamp for commercial use, at least to the extent that EPA doesnt even bother rating its gas mileage. However, since the body weight of this bruiser is 5471lbs for the 4x2 model and 5762lbs for the 4x4, the payload isnt substantially more than the regular ½ ton GM truck. Payload is 2838lbs for the 4x4 and 3129lbs for the 4x2.
Now a fair minded and reasonable TPM reader might ask what these poor, poor business owners are going to do if the NHTSA pries morbidly obese pickups from their cold, dead hands. Isnt the demand that pickups especially the heavy duty variety get passenger car gas mileage akin to asking Detroit to pursue some Manhattan Project for pickups? Automakers often complain that NHTSA demands something on the order of turning lead into gold when it comes to pickup gas mileage gains. Theres only one problem with that argument. You can already buy a Mercedes built captive import from Dodge called the Sprinter Van that gets better gas mileage than many passenger cars. The 2500 series passenger van model has a payload of 3626lbs far above the speciously named heavy duty GMC 1500s capacity, and it weighs less 4657lbs - but it rates a similar 8550lbs GVWR.
Somehow the Sprinter carries its load with a mere 2.7 liter, 154hp five cylinder turbocharged diesel engine one factor that helps rather than hinders is that it has less body weight. GM seems to think you need at least 300hp for such a task in fact you cant get anything smaller than a 300hp or 345hp 6 liter V8 on not just the 1500HD, but the 2500 ¾ ton and 3500 1 ton GMC pickups that also share the commercial 8500lb GVWR loophole status. The Mercedes built Dodge Sprinter comes from Europe, where a legislative body did not declare by fiat that commercial vehicles must be astoundingly heavy and have massive, fuel swilling engines. Since the Sprinter Van is not tested by EPA, Dodge used SAE test J1082 conducted by FEV Engine Tech to determine that the harmonic gas mileage average for the Sprinter even loaded down with 50% of its weight capacity, is 25mpg. EPA also doesnt test the gas mileage for the GMC 1500HD, but the closest vehicle in the GMC universe is the luxury oriented Sierra Denali, which has the same crew cab layout as the Sierra 1500HD, a 345hp 6 liter Vortexmax engine that is optional on the 1500HD, a shorter bed and wheelbase, and only comes in 4 wheel drive, which EPA rates at 1mpg to 2mpg less than comparable 2 wheel drive Sierras. The Denali rates a dismal 14/17mpg rating, for a 15.5mpg average so the Sprinter gets 1.6 times the gas mileage of the closest estimate we have to the 1500HD.
Even compared to the one ton class, the Sprinter compares well. The 3500 series Sprinter Cargo van with a 140 wheelbase has roughly the same payload rating as a 3500 series GMC Sierra crew cab 4x4 with dual rear wheels that model is literally the biggest, heaviest pickup truck GMC sells and it nets a 4848lb payload vs. 4824lbs for the Dodge Sprinter. Once again, the Sprinters lighter body weight in this case 5166lbs vs 6552lbs for the GMC is a help in boosting payload, since the capacity of the axles and other parts is limited by weight, it doesnt matter if the weight comes in payload or body weight devoted to a bigger passenger compartment or the extra weight of four wheel drive. The greatest payload available on the GMC line is the regular cab 3500 4x4 (a 4x2 would have greater payload, but is unavailable as a 3500 regular cab), which rates at 11,400 GVWR and has a 5687lb payload with the dual rear wheel option. (remember, you could have gotten that kind of payload in 1967 with a dual rear wheel Ford F-350 that weighed just 4300lbs) Compare that to the 3500 series Dodge Sprinter chassis cab model with a 10,200lb GVWR, but a 5774lb payload. Even on the lightest weight, smallest GMC dual rear wheel model (which has the greatest payload) the Dodge Sprinter compares favorably. Keep in mind that in its tow rating, the GMC, with about twice the horsepower of the Sprinter, yields about twice the towing capacity. However, the commercial role NHTSA assigned to pickups derives not from towing capacity, but from the cargo hauling ability of the vehicle itself. The lack of a cargo bed in 8500lb GVWR SUVs and passenger vans was used as a rationale to finally include these vehicles in C.A.F.E. regulation, even though they can tow nearly as much as similarly sized and equipped pickup trucks. In other words, NHTSA hasnt designated towing capacity in the loophole, but the Gross Vehicle Weight Rating.
Conclusions
C.A.F.E. has proven its effectiveness and is worth both keeping and improving, but the commercial rationale behind completely excluding 8500lb GVWR pickups has no historical basis in fact. Its clear that though GVWR ratings keep rising through the years, the actual ability of pickups to carry heavy burdens hasnt changed much. Considering that the new footprint system for generating C.A.F.E. targets takes into account longer pickup wheelbases, the wisest course would simply be to include all light trucks including those above 8500lbs GVWR. Clearly this false distinction between commercial and private use vehicles has actually served to make commercial vehicles needlessly bigger and thirstier, when historically pickup trucks have actually been markedly lighter in weight than passenger cars. More importantly, we can see that pickup body weight devoted to expanded cab space for extra passengers must be traded for payload capacity. Therefore, within a given class (i.e. ½ - ¾ - 1 ton) as body weight increases, payload decrease. Ergo, body weight and payload are actually negatively correlated. Given that more body weight is correlated positively with extra passenger space, it is actually passenger cars, and not light trucks that should weigh more and in fact this was the case in the 1950s and 1960s, before C.A.F.E. granted the light truck loophole.
The 8500lb GVWR loophole has already encouraged makers to game the system in order sell luxury barges like the GMC Sierra 1500HD (obviously not intended for commercial use) without any EPA rating or C.A.F.E. target at all. The recent change in the way NHTSA derives fuel economy targets and the inclusion of some 8500lb+ GVWR large vans and SUVs in the C.A.F.E. system is a major positive step, but this recent effort is only a half measure if 8500lb+GVWR pickups are excluded. Furthermore, even the 24mpg standard that includes most 1/2 ton full size pickups should be boosted to the passenger car standard of 27.5mpg. NHTSA has a duty to finish its work in making sure that the system is not gamed and also that the auto market is not skewed by a system that picks winners by giving special dispensation to light trucks in general, and a totally free pass to any pickup over 8500lbs in GVWR.




