pistonium
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- pdx oregon
I have the pleasure of working with an older guy with 30 years of diesel experience, and he showed me a trick I've never ran into before; I thought I'd pass it on to others here.
The situation is not uncommon I think, where after the first glow plug craps out on a CUCV, the rest quickly follow due to overvoltage.....
So I'm sitting in the 1008 after work, with the truck engine cold at probably 50 degrees F or so, and no glow at all. We say "the engine's good, it should start with no glow if we crank a bit". I start cranking....and again....and then Ed puts his hand tightly over the exhaust on one side and says "crank it again, I'll keep the hot air in". I crank, and it fires up quite well. After thinking about it, it makes perfect sense....leave the hot air from the compression stroke in the engine, and it should fire next time or even the third time!
Anyway, I thought it was a neat trick if you are ever stuck without glow in marginal temperatures - just plug the exhaust. And carry hand cleaner for your palm after you do it!
The situation is not uncommon I think, where after the first glow plug craps out on a CUCV, the rest quickly follow due to overvoltage.....
So I'm sitting in the 1008 after work, with the truck engine cold at probably 50 degrees F or so, and no glow at all. We say "the engine's good, it should start with no glow if we crank a bit". I start cranking....and again....and then Ed puts his hand tightly over the exhaust on one side and says "crank it again, I'll keep the hot air in". I crank, and it fires up quite well. After thinking about it, it makes perfect sense....leave the hot air from the compression stroke in the engine, and it should fire next time or even the third time!
Anyway, I thought it was a neat trick if you are ever stuck without glow in marginal temperatures - just plug the exhaust. And carry hand cleaner for your palm after you do it!