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On Sun, 05 Mar 2006 22:59:31 -0500, Larry wrote:
Larry wrote in : I could see it would carbon up if you just ran the engines in an unloaded condition in neutral for long periods of time.... Thinking about this, I cannot help but think about those engines in the big trucks that are left idling for 8 hours, virtually unloaded, while the driver is sleeping in his sleeper at the truck stop. I suppose he burns off all the deposits when he drives off down the interstate in the morning. Obviously, 8 hours of idling while sleeping, followed by 8 hours of 80 mph under load, followed by 8 hours of idling, again, isn't hurting Cummins engines much. Hell, they don't overhaul them in the real world away from the service manual until the clock says 400,000 to 500,000 miles...or more. What about my diesel cars that hardly ever leave the city? I've never seen this phenomenon while sitting in the traffic for hours on end, idling along to the next traffic light.....?? Maybe it isn't as serious as it's imagined.....?? My 73 220D was overhauled at 300K after 28 years on the road. Its exhaust always looked black and oily, especially if you brushed your pants against the pipe getting the load out of the trunk. I saved a piston and the valves from the overhaul junk pile. There wasn't any kind of hard coked deposits anywhere you couldn't wipe off with a shop rag.... Automotive/truck diesels are different, designed to run at light load for extended periods. Marine/industrial diesels are designed to run at high load all the time, like a truck pulling a full load over an endless mountain pass. Of course there's some crossover, but for the most part these are different types of engines. Matt O. |
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