Being as they were in the same general area I wondered? Did the same company make them for BCIII's also. It was around 2004.
Semi-Tractor "Tractor" pulls
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by WildTxn, Mar 19, 2018.
Page 4 of 5
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Ask owners of CM2250 ISX that had to have complete engine replacements due to ceramic plungers shattering in high pressure fuel pumps and trashing the whole lubrication system on the engine how great ceramics are! Mack used them in there intake and exhaust cam followers and I have seen many of them disenegrated wiping out cam and making mess of lubrication system. Ceramics don't tolerate impacts at all. They have their applications, don't personally think internal combustion engine is one of them. Coatings work only if done properly.
SAR Thanks this. -
We will disagree on coatings, a coating company will never heat a piston up enough to simulate the expansion of the material at operation temps. -
-
-
Take note that most of those so called tough metal parts all diesel engines are assembled from are machined with ceramic metal cutting inserts now days! I once used them all the time. The "whisker re-enforced" ceramic inserts are designed for and perform extremely well from my actual experience in interrupted cuts cutting HARDENED steel parts that a long time ago could only ground. These are interrupted surfaces with holes and key ways in them. It's like hitting the sharp cutting edge of that ceramic tool 100 times a second with a hammer! Yet they still hold their edge, produce very accurate dimensions, and outlast any other known tooling technology. Ceramic inserts are used almost exclusively in machining the modern super alloys jet engines are made out of because they are they only tools that will hold up. Matter of fact, the latest jet turbine blade technology uses solid ceramic.
It's really all a cost and corner cutting issue when it comes to using ceramics in diesel engines. Modern technology has developed way beyond any challenges imposed by the toughest diesel engines. -
I think they collect the the smoke in a filter system now believe it or not?
Last edited by a moderator: Mar 24, 2018
-
-
Rawze dyno'd a stock Cummins 871 with one of his tunes, it put out 800+ hp to the ground. Another mechanic, Unilever, helped build and TUNE another CM-871, 1,500 hp + on the dyno.
Rawze.com: Rawze's ISX Technical Discussion and more - CM871 Engine cycle...
For what it is worth.
And not something I would want or need out here on the road. -
That certainly takes all the fun out of it.BoxCarKidd Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 4 of 5