Last week I posted a thread about my M35A2 https://www.steelsoldiers.com/showt...-Kaiser-M35A2-oil-pressure-problem&highlight=. I just barely made it home that night with failing oil pressure. The next day I checked the oil and according to the dipstick I found it to be about 6 quarts high. I was assisted by the good people on this group who offered various information as well as a few videos which provided a tremendous help concerning bypassing the fuel density compensator.
Yesterday my son and I completed the mod. In my case though we also had the arctic preheater and a small filter to deal with as well, not to mention a personnel heater that was right smack dab in the way of where we were working . But we got through it OK. The drained oil, all 9 gallons of it was the consistency of kerosene. Pretty scary to think that I had that in my engine...
In any case we took the truck out for a test drive and it now seems like it has a substantial increase in power. So I have a few questions I would like to ask.
1. Did I just imagine it or does doing this bypass have an effect on power, and if so why is this?
2. What actually is the cause of this dumping of fuel into the crankcase? On M37's a membrane in the cam operated fuel pump ruptures and this is the result. Is this compensator also driven off the cam and is this a similar situation?
3. What does this compensator actually do, and if at some time in the future I should decide to run for example waste oil or solvents would I need this thing to be operational?
4. I run 911 fuel treatment in the tank every Winter. I have never used the arctic preheater which we also disconnected and the truch has always started even down below 0 degrees F. What is the likelyhood that I would ever need this device to work?
5. It seems like from what I have heard most people are convinced that this compensator is the leading cause of this fuel dumping. One guy on video even went so far as to say that 90 percent of cases like mine are corrected by this mod. So I'm hopeful that we nailed it. Now I plan to take some short trips in the truck initially to see how everthing seems. And I will be diligent, (more than I've been in the past in checking the oil), but it's nagging at me. Just in case we didn't fix the problem would there be typical or predictable number of hours on the engine where this might fill up again? I have a 70 mile trip planned for the end of July. I just worry about being stuck on the road with a crankcase full of newly diluted oil and no oil pressure to drive it home. This problem just seemed to come on so fast it does worry me.
Thanks everyone for your help and advice with this. I don't know where I'd be without this group. Lenny
Yesterday my son and I completed the mod. In my case though we also had the arctic preheater and a small filter to deal with as well, not to mention a personnel heater that was right smack dab in the way of where we were working . But we got through it OK. The drained oil, all 9 gallons of it was the consistency of kerosene. Pretty scary to think that I had that in my engine...
In any case we took the truck out for a test drive and it now seems like it has a substantial increase in power. So I have a few questions I would like to ask.
1. Did I just imagine it or does doing this bypass have an effect on power, and if so why is this?
2. What actually is the cause of this dumping of fuel into the crankcase? On M37's a membrane in the cam operated fuel pump ruptures and this is the result. Is this compensator also driven off the cam and is this a similar situation?
3. What does this compensator actually do, and if at some time in the future I should decide to run for example waste oil or solvents would I need this thing to be operational?
4. I run 911 fuel treatment in the tank every Winter. I have never used the arctic preheater which we also disconnected and the truch has always started even down below 0 degrees F. What is the likelyhood that I would ever need this device to work?
5. It seems like from what I have heard most people are convinced that this compensator is the leading cause of this fuel dumping. One guy on video even went so far as to say that 90 percent of cases like mine are corrected by this mod. So I'm hopeful that we nailed it. Now I plan to take some short trips in the truck initially to see how everthing seems. And I will be diligent, (more than I've been in the past in checking the oil), but it's nagging at me. Just in case we didn't fix the problem would there be typical or predictable number of hours on the engine where this might fill up again? I have a 70 mile trip planned for the end of July. I just worry about being stuck on the road with a crankcase full of newly diluted oil and no oil pressure to drive it home. This problem just seemed to come on so fast it does worry me.
Thanks everyone for your help and advice with this. I don't know where I'd be without this group. Lenny
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