Plenty of engines run 200 degrees. Heck, I've driven International T444E's that would run 215-220 all the time in the summer. The newer DT466's run 190-200 (IIRC, International says up to 225 is fine on the 466), the C7 ACERT in my Sterling runs 190-195 in the winter.
My Caddy runs 230 in the summer.![]()
Why I Never Plug The Truck In During Winter
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by Burky, Dec 21, 2007.
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Back in those days, there was no correct starting procedure. It was a matter of do whatever you had to to get the darn thing kicked over. And believe me, if a 2 stroke Detroit has been sitting outside in the depths of a Michigan winter for a week or more, it does not immediately warm up and run smooth. They Ran rough and took quite a while to warm themselves up. they were an incredibly tough old engine, but cold weather cranking was not their forte.
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Yeah my MBE4000 runs 200 all the time winter summer or whatever when pulling a hill it will climb to 220 and thats it never seen it go over that and never been under 195. Not a fan of theese motors but I will say this one so far has been impressive, I didnt pay for it so whatever.
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Sometime, when you have a spare moment, take a good look at the temp gauges on these hot running vehicles, and then tell us at what temp on the gauge it changes over from the green (normal temp) segment, over to the yellow (high temp) segment, and then into the red (kiss your engine goodbye) segment.. I suspect that if you are routinely seeing temps of 215-220 on those engines, the gauges are running well into the yellow area.
Check the temp gauge on the Caddy as well. -
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No temp gauge on the Caddy...the gauges consist of a speedometer & a gas gauge...that's it. However, it's run that hot for almost 100,000 miles without a problem. and the TEMP light has never come on. I run Evans NPG+ coolant--it's the combination of a stock-size radiator cooling an engine (542 stroker) that roughly triples the factory HP. -
Then again, I've lit off 6V and 8V71's in sub-zero weather without it.
A 2-stroke Jimmy WILL NOT warm up idling. They need to be driven.
The only better cold starters I've seen are International DT466's. Those seem essentially immune to cold...even the old S1700 wrecker (a 79 with over 650,000 miles since an IFO) would light off instantly. Ford/IH 7.3's are pretty good (as long as the ring seal is strong)...I found that cycling the glow plugs twice helps dramatically. -
When I had my mechanical 3406 cats I never pluged on in and we lived in WI. poped every time.
the detroit series 60's I'v been driving lately won't start if it's below 10 degrees but they are higher milage city trucks too.
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