mustangcats wrote:What size engine do you plan to get? I had a 2006 Dakota with the 3.7 V6 and it was too underpowered to pull my 12', 2800 lb trailer. It lost too much speed going up long hills. I now have a 2011 Ram 1500 with the 5.7 Hemi V8 and I am very happy with it. You also mentioned 25+ mpg...the best any Dakota can do is about 20 mpg...and that is not towing anything. When I was towing, the Dakota got about 14 mpg and my Ram gets about the same. Dodge Dakota's are great trucks and I had 2 of them...but not many people feel they are good towing vehicles.
I am one of those nuts from over at
Ecomodder, and a big part of my fun in doing this is to see just how many miles I can squeeze out of a gallon of Ancient Swamp Juice. My mileage log for the 2014 summer trip shows ca. 9400 miles at about 25.8MPG, and that's with a 2.2L gas pickup. I also like building things, so another part of the entertainment is to see just how light I can make a full-sized travel trailer. I already built a 350lb. 5x12 teardrop, and have the rough "box" weight for this one down under 1000lbs without any optimization.
I am aiming for a max "wet" weight of less than 3000 lbs, and am not afraid of slowing down a bit and downshifting - my 2014 trip had some long mountain pulls in second gear at 28MPH in the Sonoma...

Those weren't on interstates, and I was actually passing some larger rigs (V8 Suburban with hitch trailer, etc.) with fair regularity, so it wasn't like I was alone in crawling up the mountains...
The motor I'm planning on for the Dakota is a Mercedes OM606, a 3.0L turbodiesel with a stock output of about the same HP as the 3.7 V6, but a higher torque output peaking at 1600RPM. This should make a better hill motor. As part of the prep for the swap I'm having an injection pump from an OM603 rebuilt with higher volume elements, so if I find the Dakota just isn't going "up" like I want it to I'll replace the turbo and dial up the pump a bit, which will take it into the Hemi's neighborhood for torque.
We'll see how well it all works out - I'm doing a lot of back-of-napkin engineering here, and every comment like yours is appreciated! It gives me a sense of how I should limit my expectations.
