I have seen many rigs have an engine melt down due to fan belt coming off idling, which didn't affect the gear driven water pump. They all need a little air from time to time. My fan will cycle with the A/C long before the engine needs it still yet serves the purpose.
High Idle w/ Engine Fan on for 10 hours..????
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by BROKENSPROKET, Jun 18, 2014.
Page 3 of 3
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
High idle has nothing to do with emissions, you need heat in the engine, especially in cold weather. If you look at a truck in cold weather and there's vapor coming out of the exhaust, it's because it's not running hot enough and is actually having condensation inside the engine. -
-
-
I sleep with earplugs in fairly regularly. It helps a lot but I get what you are saying, -
-
Hammer166 Thanks this.
-
-
-
Old thread but:
An engine running cooler than specified, (typically less than 190 degrees F) will affect EGR and fuel injection rates which will affect NOx levels that the SCR system has to convert.
Under low idle the engine doesn't reach full operating temperature and the EGT is low so soot will accumulate in the particulate filter and more soot reaches the filter. While low EGTs and idle time are also hard on the turbo, especially when the ideal is 350F or higher EGT's , the reason companies want you to use high idle is so that they don't need to replace the one boxes, or deal with def injector failures as often. Also parked regens will be more common and those burn a lot of fuel.
As many manufactures parked regen won't happen unless the HVAC is off so parked regens won't happen with typical sleeping with HVAC on and that's were you end up with derates etc....
Over cooling with the fan switch, or not enough load (low idle for hours), are the primary reasons for emissions systems problems like regens, plugged def doser etc... with the exception of cases where the engines have a lot of blow by or other mechanical problems and upstream leaks that cause ash buildup.
In passenger cars they have similar issues which they solved by making the temperature gauge sit in the "normal" range from ~190-235F. But us truck drivers still get the fan switch and real temps. We just need to remember that things have changed in the past 50 years.
In EGR and newer emissions trucks need to run hot, which low idle simply doesn't provide.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 3 of 3