LanceRobson
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Wet stacking is the presence of unburned fuel and, usually, moisture in the exhaust system when an engine is not running hard and hot enough to burn all the fuel and dry out the cold exhaust system. Most of it comes from fuel condensing on the relatively cold cylinder surfaces before it can be burned and the moisture is both a combustion by-product condensation in the cold exhaust and whatever moisture was in the exhaust system at start-up.
Extensive idle of the engine at too low an RPM to really warm up the engine can contribute to oil contamination and dilution due to unburned fuel condensate getting past the not quite seated piston rings and washing into the crankcase.
If you ever idled the engine for a while and on revving up had little (or not so little) black droplets spray out of the exhaust and stain your canvas, paint (and the wife's gold Le Sabre ), you're seeing the result of wet stacking.
Wet stacking after the 5 minute warm up is a sign that the engine is still too cold and if the truck is going to idle for a while the idle needs to be run up.
Regarding the "well here's the way I do it..." posts, the Department of Defense bought and maintained well over 60.000 of these things and I'll trust their judgment. I recommend following the instructions in the operator's manual.
A lot of folks keep the engine stop pulled out and crank the engine for several seconds to begin filling the oil filters before starting up. We do that, especially when the truck hasn't been started in a while. It does shorten the time to oil pressure considerably.
From memory, the -10 manual instructs the operator to use a faster idle (1100 RPM?) AFTER the five minute warm up if the vehicle will be idling for a long time. The 2 strokes have more wet stacking issues. When some of the Detroits in military applications were going to be extensively idled they wanted to be idled as high as 1400 RPM to warm up enough to stop it.
Lance
Extensive idle of the engine at too low an RPM to really warm up the engine can contribute to oil contamination and dilution due to unburned fuel condensate getting past the not quite seated piston rings and washing into the crankcase.
If you ever idled the engine for a while and on revving up had little (or not so little) black droplets spray out of the exhaust and stain your canvas, paint (and the wife's gold Le Sabre ), you're seeing the result of wet stacking.
Wet stacking after the 5 minute warm up is a sign that the engine is still too cold and if the truck is going to idle for a while the idle needs to be run up.
Regarding the "well here's the way I do it..." posts, the Department of Defense bought and maintained well over 60.000 of these things and I'll trust their judgment. I recommend following the instructions in the operator's manual.
A lot of folks keep the engine stop pulled out and crank the engine for several seconds to begin filling the oil filters before starting up. We do that, especially when the truck hasn't been started in a while. It does shorten the time to oil pressure considerably.
From memory, the -10 manual instructs the operator to use a faster idle (1100 RPM?) AFTER the five minute warm up if the vehicle will be idling for a long time. The 2 strokes have more wet stacking issues. When some of the Detroits in military applications were going to be extensively idled they wanted to be idled as high as 1400 RPM to warm up enough to stop it.
Lance