I missed a few of your updates since I've been back to work, but have you turned on the engine yet?
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I missed a few of your updates since I've been back to work, but have you turned on the engine yet?
Question: Do you like to go wheeling in this thing?
Josh is a buddy of mine, he and some other friends go wheeling around here from time to time. I usually have a truck too but at the moment am truckless, build in the works. If you like to go wheeling though we could bring ya along on some of our trips. Probably do some snow trips this fall as the snow begins to fall!!
BTW, this is a better engine than the v8, depending on what your uses are of the truck! You ought to come by and check out my diesel some time.
Cheers
\Are you going to run solid engine mounts on the front? Seems like you would be in for some serious vibration?
Looks like you just posted right before me....keep the project rolling...its going to be a cool setup in the end.
Man, you have that motor place waaaaaay low in the frame! Any issues with diff to oil pan clearance?
Pulled this from my thread on what I did for break-in after my engine rebuild:
First 50-100 miles keep it in high gear and rpms between 1500-1800.
For the next 1000 miles keep it below 2000-2100 and drive it around.
I got on the road on Monday and took care of the first requirement. It was hard because at that rpm without my lockup wired up yet I was barely doing 55mph. Semi's were blowing right by me, but I kept my foot out of it.
The next round I will split up like this: The first tank of fuel will be mellowish and the second will be towing my trailer around empty. After that I'll romp on it like I normally do and drive like normal.
For oil changing I'll change this first batch with 6-8hrs of operation. Then run it for about 30hrs and change again. After that I'll change on a normal schedule. I'm really looking for the engine to last 15 years and I figure probably sometime before that I'll have another comutter so the lifespan should lengthen.
I didn't read through the entire thread, but what's been done to the engine to require a break in procedure?
If it's a new engine it's already broke in. Cummins engines are run in before they leave the factory. Take care of the engine, keep it loaded (i.e. don't free rev it to 3000 for 10 minutes).
If you have fresh bores, pistons, rings, cam and tappets break in the cam, dump the oil, re-adjust the valves, change the filter then drive it easy for 10 minutes (like a cruise down the freeway), then put it under a medium load (like go up the biggest hill you have in your area) then put it under 100% load for as long as possible. This would be like towing 10K up the same steep hill at full throttle, max boost, highest gear you can get the engine into. Keep RPM's below 2500 to maintain maximum cylinder pressure.
Continue trying to keep the engine under moderate to heavy load try to keep the oil changed often enough to tell when it stops turning black. Monitor blowby. Blowby should all but stop when the oil stops turning black. This would probably be 1000 miles of driving, ideally all at once with lots of mountain passes and towing included (go on a vacation, tow your boat).
When you've gone a couple oil changes with regular oil without using any oil, blowby is gone and the oil stays clean for extended periods then switch to synthetic if wanted.
If you slapped rings in old bores just drive it, it'll never be perfect so don't worry about it.
You did your first oil change after 6-8 hours? What oil did you use the first time? Have you ever looked into the John Deer break in oil?