The math I put in a calculator came out to be this:
Gear Ratio (2:1) Tire Height (in.) Engine RPM Transmission Gear Ratio (7th gear) SPEED
2.87 46" 2600 .78
79.5 mph (Top)
2.87 46"
2100 .78 64.21mph (Cruising)
(the site just eats the formatting on this chart)
I like the insight and the math is..well the math, I've seen your previous posts and they're on point but the situation changes things outside this comparison. Since everyone is not hauling @ss at top speed in 7th gear in these trucks (and I hope not) they should have plenty of torque to take on reasonable highway driving speeds and climbing speeds. Location, altitude, road grade, etc should all be considered in ones plan of use. If you're climbing mountains in your area then gear accordingly.
Your own words were "I'm not sure if I would put 3.07:1 gears in again, but it's not quite bad enough to be worth taking them out either." So that tells me they're good enough for most people in most conditions despite your experiences not matching up with mine, cachgeo's, and others.
Texas, being mostly flat, but not all flat, suits the 2.87 gears as does most of the sunbelt states. Colorado, Utah, etc.. consider the routes and plan accordingly. If towing in those environments then why not deal with the 3.90? Food for thought to anyone reading.
I'm curious to know a head to head comparison of two trucks; one 225 hp stock with 3.90 in
7th and one 290/330 hp with the 3.07/2.87 in
6th climbing a steep hill. I haven't crunched the numbers (and it depends on the engine, truck weight, etc) but for the sake of the question would they be comparable at climbing the hill at the same speed? If the gain in hp is negated by the loss in torque by the gears then simplistically they should ascend the hill at roughly the same rate. If we want to get real we'd need to factor in peak/ideal torque, initial assention speed, and etc which makes the answer "well it depends".
Clearly a lower geared truck climbing a hill from a dead stop will ascend quicker but these trucks should be at sufficient speed (50+ mph) on highway to keep some momentum. Would you take the 3.90 geared truck running 2400 rpm @ 54.01 mph up a hill in 7th or a 2.87 geared truck running 2100 rpm @ 55.65 mph in 6th? I personally would be fine if it downshifted into 6th on a steep hill as it's still going faster than the lower geared truck and I probably would have hit the hill going faster anyway. You will feel the speed slowing of course because you have the speed to give that the stock geared truck doesn't have.