No injector adjustment??? |
11-13-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #19 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? (11-12-2019 )snailexpress Wrote: 20 years back in Siberia every driver was using blowtorch with J shaped 3 -5 feet long pipe with deflector on short end. Install it under oil pan and oil is warm. Then move it under fuel tank where pick up tube for short time. Yup, still do to this today. I pack a curved truck stack and a tiger torch with a 20lb propane bottle most of the winter. You never know when shi#t is gonna hit the fan and you're going to have to thaw out a frozen truck...or in my case a frozen Cat D-10T dozer User's Signature: Why? Why do I always ask "why?" Because I can't learn or help teach others with "'cause I said so..." | |||
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11-13-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #20 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? (11-12-2019 )Hammerhead Wrote:(11-11-2019 )Rawze Wrote: Hammerhead mentioned some guys resorting to draining their oil when shutting down at those arctic temps, keeping oil inside where it is warm .. pouring the warm oil back into engine when needing to crank it up again in that type of cold. Gotta love that beer .. It teaches us things we never knew .... BTW: Zeffra said she already misses our fun, BullS$it beer-drinking philosophical discussions LoL ... User's Signature: ->: What I post is just my own thoughts and Opinions! --- I AM Full Of S__T!. | |||
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11-13-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #21 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? (11-13-2019 )Hammerhead Wrote:You know, I asked that two winters ago... should I park the trailer in the shop overnight? Or should we start it now at -20 to let it run overnight before it’s -38?(11-12-2019 )snailexpress Wrote: 20 years back in Siberia every driver was using blowtorch with J shaped 3 -5 feet long pipe with deflector on short end. Install it under oil pan and oil is warm. Then move it under fuel tank where pick up tube for short time. It was just a little Case wheel loader, nowhere near what you haul They almost didn’t load me in Fargo because of the cold, and I was worrying about getting unloaded for the same reason User's Signature: I have no idea what I’m doing and probably need supervising | |||
11-13-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #22 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? Nothing good ever happens in the cold... I'm eyeballing my propane tank and torch right now after the past few days... I cannot even get out of the house! The road out is an 8%+ grade, still iced over, tried Monday and had to back all the way back to my road... Barely made it up my driveway after the attempt to leave to go to work. We had 10" of snow here, started plowing at 0900 took a break and hit it again, finished when it was to dark, around 1800... Man we were hammered, and not one salt or plow truck has been out on the side roads. Still a mess here in Michigan. And I am not throwing chains, LOL! Drinking beer instead... ;-) | |||
11-13-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #23 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? Besides block and pan heater grandpa had a heating pad on his batteries. He said warm batteries helped a lot. 4 sixes in those days. Wired up series parallel. If he had to stay at the wood lot overnight he would bring the batteries in and put them by the fireplace. Hut had no electricity. Had a metal pan he put coals from the fireplace in and put it under the oil pan about an hour or two before staring in the morning. Pull the air filter out, crumple up a bunch of newspaper in the housing and light it. With warm batts, warm oil and warm air his 6-71 usually lit right off. And a bit of gasoline was the antigel treatment of choice for him. Didn't like ether. BTW anybody here remember ether balls? Like paint balls but filled with ether. Went in a thing that looked sort of like an oiler. Had a big sharp needle inside and a spring loaded cap. Put the ball in, let the cap snap shut. Pierced the ball and let the ether run into the intake. Cummins had a compression release option that was slick. Had a rod that ran the length of the block. Intake or exhaust, don't remember which had flanges on them. Haul back on a lever and the valves were held open. Get the engine spinning, release the lever and she would usually fire. | |||
11-14-2019, (Subject: No injector adjustment??? ) Post: #24 | |||
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RE: No injector adjustment??? (11-13-2019 )DVT873 Wrote: Besides block and pan heater grandpa had a heating pad on his batteries. He said warm batteries helped a lot. 4 sixes in those days. Wired up series parallel. If he had to stay at the wood lot overnight he would bring the batteries in and put them by the fireplace. Hut had no electricity. Had a metal pan he put coals from the fireplace in and put it under the oil pan about an hour or two before staring in the morning. Pull the air filter out, crumple up a bunch of newspaper in the housing and light it. With warm batts, warm oil and warm air his 6-71 usually lit right off. And a bit of gasoline was the antigel treatment of choice for him. Didn't like ether. BTW anybody here remember ether balls? Like paint balls but filled with ether. Went in a thing that looked sort of like an oiler. Had a big sharp needle inside and a spring loaded cap. Put the ball in, let the cap snap shut. Pierced the ball and let the ether run into the intake. Cummins had a compression release option that was slick. Had a rod that ran the length of the block. Intake or exhaust, don't remember which had flanges on them. Haul back on a lever and the valves were held open. Get the engine spinning, release the lever and she would usually fire. We have it pretty good nowadays... I remember the coal from when I was a kid... It worked. | |||
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