Being up north of 60 in Canada, I was curious on how peoples Cruisers were running in these frigid temperatures.
Up in Whitehorse, it has been -45 for the past few days.
I have found that the brakes are very stiff and letting the cruiser sit and idle (@1200 rpm) with the throttle pulled does very little to put a load on the engine.
Five minutes of driving and the coolant temperature does raise and there is heat coming out of the vents. I keep the vehicle plugged in all night and starts up without any issues (a couple cycles of warming the glow plugs) apart from the square tires. I have on oil pan heater, inline coolant heater, and a battery blanket on each battery. Switched out the Amsoil15w40 synthetic oil to mobile 10w30 synthetic. This has resulted in a bit of a lower oil pressure.
How have other people been doing with their diesels? Any suggestions to make the operations less painful on the cruiser at these temperatures?
Up in Whitehorse, it has been -45 for the past few days.
I have found that the brakes are very stiff and letting the cruiser sit and idle (@1200 rpm) with the throttle pulled does very little to put a load on the engine.
Five minutes of driving and the coolant temperature does raise and there is heat coming out of the vents. I keep the vehicle plugged in all night and starts up without any issues (a couple cycles of warming the glow plugs) apart from the square tires. I have on oil pan heater, inline coolant heater, and a battery blanket on each battery. Switched out the Amsoil15w40 synthetic oil to mobile 10w30 synthetic. This has resulted in a bit of a lower oil pressure.
How have other people been doing with their diesels? Any suggestions to make the operations less painful on the cruiser at these temperatures?