Okay, he then told me to pull the stop engine lever(fuel cutoff) every day the first time I start it because he said they have a tendency to have leaking injectors which can cause the engine to hydraulic after sitting overnight. If you think about the pressure the injection pump builds and then imagine shutting down your engine after it's been running, it sits for 12 hours with a leaky injector and slightly fills a cylinder. He said it's common to bend a rod in these things. I've heard a few other people on here talking about how weak the rods are in the Deuce as well; I don't know of many engines that survive being hydrauliced anyway...
I figured that was one reason, but my theory is that you get all the air or should I say allow the lift pump to pump up the system before you start cranking and creating high pressure to the injectors. I'm sure the injection pump is like any other pump and likes a non-airated supply of fuel for best performance.
Like I said in the previous post; it fired off in a few revs. I was impressed, but I also realize there's some other components I need to check/replace/adjust...
Hope this helps...
Your friend told you the essence of deuce starting religion, but either he didn't tell you the whole deal, or you forgot some of it.
The deuce has a super high compression ratio compared to most diesels, 22.5-to-1. This allows the MF engine to burn cold gasoline. It has a big and deep compression chamber (pit) built into the pistons, that would contain any small amount of leakage that would come from leaky injectors... unless you left the accessory power turned on, letting the fuel pump run, while the engine was stopped for an extended period... but it won't handle ingested water, or water that leaks in from a leaky head gasket. That will cause an instantaneously bent connecting rod when other cylinders in the engine fire.
The starter motor doesn't have enough torque to go past a hydro-locked cylinder.
Deuce starting religion, as set down by the head shack, is to:
1) put the truck in neutral.
2) set the fuel cutoff valve to off.
3) turn the accessory power on.
4) press in the clutch.
5) crank the engine for a couple of seconds (fuel off).
6) set the fuel cutoff valve to on.
7) crank the engine to start.
8 ) let it idle until you hear the oil starved bearings stop clattering,
and the turbo start spinning... about 1 to 2 minutes.
9) bring the idle up to 1000RPM, and let it idle for the rest of 5 minutes,
while the air pressure builds.
10) After you have air pressure, off you go!
Deuce shutdown religion, as set down by the head shack, is that you:
1) put the truck in neutral, set the brakes, and let it idle.
2) when 5 minutes is up, you turn off the accessory power,
and pull the fuel cutoff to shut it down.
3) chock the wheels
4) blow the water out of the air tanks.
Cranking the engine for a couple of seconds with the fuel cutoff allows each cylinder to go through a compression stroke. If any cylinder is hydro-locked, the engine will go thump and not crank anymore. No damage will occur. [To unlock a hydro-locked engine, you have to remove the injectors, and crank the engine until enough of the water is out, and then put it back together and run it... Oh, you had better fix that leaky head gasket ASAP...]
Letting it idle at slow idle until the bearings stop clattering is to give the oil pump time to fill the completely empty oil filter canisters, and completely dry oil galleries, and bearings, AT THE SLOWEST ENGINE SPEED POSSIBLE. This reduces damage to the bearings (from the poor oil filter design) to the minimum possible. A set of spin on oil filter adapters, and oil filters with anti backflow valves is the easiest, best single thing you can do to improve the life of your MF engine.
Whatever you do, do NOT race the engine until after it is fully warmed up, if ever! Idle is the rule on a just started engine.
Some engines, particularly those with bypassed Fuel Density Compensators (FDC), need to see a little throttle when starting, especially when cold. That is usually because the Injector Pump (IP) wasn't adjusted quite properly to compensate for the removal of the FDC function.
-Chuck