You misunderstood me. I'm not talking about cranking it to prime it. I'm talking about cranking it to oil the engine for the first time after a rebuild. It's easier on the engine to start oiling at starter speed instead of idle speed, and especially easier on the turbo.
engine locked up
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by akki abdel, Aug 28, 2021.
Page 9 of 12
-
Rideandrepair and akki abdel Thank this.
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
I'm saying that after a rebuild you can put a pump to the engine and oil Prime the engine before it ever turns over so there is no need to turn the engine over till it's time to actually start it.
Some people may do exactly what you're saying. I don't because there is a time lag between when the pump actually picks the oil up and how long it takes to circulate that oil through the whole engine and get it to the top of the engine. In the meantime it is a dry engine cranking.
Plus the only time I want my starter to engage is just to give it a quick Spin and start my engine. That's it.
If the engine is oil primed beforehand the whole engine from the crankshaft through the oil galleys and the oil cooler to camshaft and the very top of the engine everything is completely oiled so there is no need to do anything except start it.
Then you can fuel prime it and when you hit the starter button it will start just like you start your truck in the morning.
You may do it differently or know people that do it differently but that's how I do it.Rideandrepair and akki abdel Thank this. -
Rideandrepair Thanks this.
-
Tbh it sounds like they kept trying to start it without oil in engine and shutdown safety kept shutting it off . Only later they realized it had no oil so they added some to try and cover tracks .. get a ecm download to see what occurred.
Dino soar and Rideandrepair Thank this. -
That sounds right. Makes sense. Should be low oil shutdown code stored. Flash code on dash would probably show it as a stored code.
-
You are definitely going to have to find a lawyer and you're going to have to figure out which shop did what because they owe you an engine or at least serious repair.
With the information given I don't know that there's any more of an answer to give.Rideandrepair Thanks this. -
Better yet sell all your equipment and go back to doing whatever you did before trucking. You have NO clue.Roberts450, spindrift, God prefers Diesels and 4 others Thank this. -
God prefers Diesels Thanks this.
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 9 of 12