towing rig

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Frankenchevy

Proverbs 16:18
Joined
Jan 3, 2018
Posts
6,082
Reaction score
7,756
Location
USA
First Name
Jeremy
Truck Year
Square
Truck Model
CUCV
Engine Size
Small
How does that work? And good to know lol. Does it require key on amd wait ?

If not, then he is lucky by the entire virtue his engine doesn’t have them because he was pretty clueless to engine things it seemed
It’s a resistive heating element that sits at the end of the air horn. It heats the incoming air when starting the engine. Yes, you should wait for it to heat up for cold starts.

You must be registered for see images attach


…but Cummins or not, you would think that any diesel owner would know what glow plugs are. Although it sounds like the guy you are talking about is not big on maintenance or very mechanically inclined/interested.
 

AuroraGirl

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2019
Posts
9,693
Reaction score
6,869
Location
Northern Wisconsin
First Name
Taylor
Truck Year
1978, 1980
Truck Model
K10, K25
Engine Size
400(?), 350
It’s a resistive heating element that sits at the end of the air horn. It heats the incoming air when starting the engine. Yes, you should wait for it to heat up for cold starts.

You must be registered for see images attach


…but Cummins or not, you would think that any diesel owner would know what glow plugs are. Although it sounds like the guy you are talking about is not big on maintenance or very mechanically inclined/interested.
I doubt anything I told him stuck for more than 5 minutes not gonna lie
 

Matt69olds

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2018
Posts
2,451
Reaction score
3,819
Location
Central Indiana
First Name
Matt
Truck Year
81
Truck Model
GMC 1/2 ton
Engine Size
455 Olds
How does that work? And good to know lol. Does it require key on amd wait ?

If not, then he is lucky by the entire virtue his engine doesn’t have them because he was pretty clueless to engine things it seemed

The wait to start light on my 06 is temperature dependent. If it’s warmer than 60 degrees, light doesn’t come on. The colder it is, the longer the light is on.

I have caught my wife starting the truck immediately in temperatures when I know damn well the light will be on. She says she occasionally forgets what vehicle she is driving. The truck smokes a little and runs a little rough, but I don’t think it’s a big deal.
 

SirRobyn0

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 6, 2019
Posts
6,755
Reaction score
11,402
Location
In the woods in Western Washington
First Name
Rob
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C20
Engine Size
305
The wait to start light on my 06 is temperature dependent. If it’s warmer than 60 degrees, light doesn’t come on. The colder it is, the longer the light is on.

I have caught my wife starting the truck immediately in temperatures when I know damn well the light will be on. She says she occasionally forgets what vehicle she is driving. The truck smokes a little and runs a little rough, but I don’t think it’s a big deal.
I've never owned a Diesel car or truck, though I do own an 84' Diesel tractor. So I'm guilty of that once in while at the shop. We really don't see many diesels, and sometimes when I'm in a hurry it's easy to forget. My tractor has heat coil on the dash that glows red, and if you don't wait a couple seconds after it's glowing I'll crank it and it'll flood, that's always fun. I remember oh about 15 years ago I worked with a guy that had mid-80's Ford with whatever their diesel was 6.9? The glow plugs were pretty much dead and he'd start it both at home and at the shop with a squirt of starting fluid. Sheesh, I always thought he'd blow it up one day, but didn't in the time I was there anyway.
 

AuroraGirl

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2019
Posts
9,693
Reaction score
6,869
Location
Northern Wisconsin
First Name
Taylor
Truck Year
1978, 1980
Truck Model
K10, K25
Engine Size
400(?), 350
The wait to start light on my 06 is temperature dependent. If it’s warmer than 60 degrees, light doesn’t come on. The colder it is, the longer the light is on.

I have caught my wife starting the truck immediately in temperatures when I know damn well the light will be on. She says she occasionally forgets what vehicle she is driving. The truck smokes a little and runs a little rough, but I don’t think it’s a big deal.
Id assume its just harder on the batteries and makes for a "rough" start like you say in the grand scheme? Kinda like pumping the pedal 7 times then holding it down and turning on a sbc, youre gonna have gas smell and stumble a bit clearing the flood but then it will catch up.
I could be wrong
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
6,970
Reaction score
12,220
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
It’s not really harder on the engine. It’s just harder to light non flammable fuel when everything including the cylinders is cold.
It’s harder on em to use ether as it burns much faster (obviously) and shock loads cold parts.
But any Duramax or Common Rail Cummins has enough fuel pressure that its gotta be pretty cold before the glow plugs or grid heater are needed or even beneficial to get them to light off quickly.

I don’t even think about waiting for the wait to start above freezing.
 

Matt69olds

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2018
Posts
2,451
Reaction score
3,819
Location
Central Indiana
First Name
Matt
Truck Year
81
Truck Model
GMC 1/2 ton
Engine Size
455 Olds
Kinda off the subject of the original content of this thread, but relevant to the current discussion:

I have also never had issues starting my diesels in the cold. I spent a week in Minnesota on a snowmobile trip, the warmest it got that entire week was 12 below zero. That is ACTUAL temp, not windchill. The truck started right up without hassle, and the block heater wasn’t plug in.

Since my wife currently drives my Ram, it does get plugged overnight during the winter. I have verified with a scan tool, with the block heater plugged in the engine is around 100 degrees. That makes it MUCH easier to clear the windows. I think the cooling system on these trucks holds 7 gallons of coolant, it takes a while to heat up that much water when it really cold.

One thing that always made me scratch my head is the weird 4 cylinder “lope” these trucks have during cold warmup. After a couple minutes of idle if, the PCM automatically raises the idle speed, and shuts off the injectors for 2 cylinders. It makes the truck shake, and idles really rough. I have no clue why they are designed to do that.

I have also never had fuel gelling problems. Some people religiously add fuel treatment, occasionally I’ll run a bottle of injector cleaner thru the truck when I plan to really work it hard.
 

Itali83

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2015
Posts
575
Reaction score
1,078
Location
Maine
First Name
Ben
Truck Year
1982, 1987, 1987
Truck Model
K10, 'burban C10, Jimmy
Engine Size
350, 6.2, 350
Kinda off the subject of the original content of this thread, but relevant to the current discussion:

I have also never had issues starting my diesels in the cold. I spent a week in Minnesota on a snowmobile trip, the warmest it got that entire week was 12 below zero. That is ACTUAL temp, not windchill. The truck started right up without hassle, and the block heater wasn’t plug in.

Since my wife currently drives my Ram, it does get plugged overnight during the winter. I have verified with a scan tool, with the block heater plugged in the engine is around 100 degrees. That makes it MUCH easier to clear the windows. I think the cooling system on these trucks holds 7 gallons of coolant, it takes a while to heat up that much water when it really cold.

One thing that always made me scratch my head is the weird 4 cylinder “lope” these trucks have during cold warmup. After a couple minutes of idle if, the PCM automatically raises the idle speed, and shuts off the injectors for 2 cylinders. It makes the truck shake, and idles really rough. I have no clue why they are designed to do that.

I have also never had fuel gelling problems. Some people religiously add fuel treatment, occasionally I’ll run a bottle of injector cleaner thru the truck when I plan to really work it hard.
They do the 4 cylinder idle to make it warm up faster. Diesels don’t really build heat at idle because of how little fuel is needed to be injected. Even when up to temperature, diesels will cool down a little when brought back to idle. It takes more fuel and more heat is made from running on 4 cylinders while warming up than running on 6 believe it or not.

Ben.
 

Matt69olds

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2018
Posts
2,451
Reaction score
3,819
Location
Central Indiana
First Name
Matt
Truck Year
81
Truck Model
GMC 1/2 ton
Engine Size
455 Olds
They do the 4 cylinder idle to make it warm up faster. Diesels don’t really build heat at idle because of how little fuel is needed to be injected. Even when up to temperature, diesels will cool down a little when brought back to idle. It takes more fuel and more heat is made from running on 4 cylinders while warming up than running on 6 believe it or not.

Ben.

That’s the story I have heard as well, I guess the theory is compressing air without the fuel creates more heat than injecting fuel into a engine under a light load.

On the flip side of that theory, I worked at a Cadillac dealership when the Northstar engine was first released. One of the “features” discussed in a training class was the ability for the engine to run up to 50 miles with no coolant. The PCM would shut off random cylinders and just pump air thru the engine to keep the temperature under control.
 

AuroraGirl

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2019
Posts
9,693
Reaction score
6,869
Location
Northern Wisconsin
First Name
Taylor
Truck Year
1978, 1980
Truck Model
K10, K25
Engine Size
400(?), 350
That’s the story I have heard as well, I guess the theory is compressing air without the fuel creates more heat than injecting fuel into a engine under a light load.

On the flip side of that theory, I worked at a Cadillac dealership when the Northstar engine was first released. One of the “features” discussed in a training class was the ability for the engine to run up to 50 miles with no coolant. The PCM would shut off random cylinders and just pump air thru the engine to keep the temperature under control.
I think the 4 cylinders remaining have more load and thus... work harder? No that means more diesel, maybe im right but im going with no LOL!

also the northstar is cool like that, and the 50 miles at 55mph. At 261 degrees the car switches off one bank of injectors and then those cylinders cool the engine by pumping air and also not combusting gasoline, then the banks switch every 30 seconds
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
6,970
Reaction score
12,220
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
That’s the story I have heard as well, I guess the theory is compressing air without the fuel creates more heat than injecting fuel into a engine under a light load.

On the flip side of that theory, I worked at a Cadillac dealership when the Northstar engine was first released. One of the “features” discussed in a training class was the ability for the engine to run up to 50 miles with no coolant. The PCM would shut off random cylinders and just pump air thru the engine to keep the temperature under control.
GM engineering at it's finest. Instead of designing or fixing a much maligned pos of an engine platform, they actually planned for it to fail unexpectedly and spent money on risk management vs a good running engine....
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
6,970
Reaction score
12,220
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
Its 3 cylinder high idle and yes it's for quicker warmup. More fuel per firing cylinder makes more heat than less fuel in all 6.
 

AuroraGirl

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2019
Posts
9,693
Reaction score
6,869
Location
Northern Wisconsin
First Name
Taylor
Truck Year
1978, 1980
Truck Model
K10, K25
Engine Size
400(?), 350
GM engineering at it's finest. Instead of designing or fixing a much maligned pos of an engine platform, they actually planned for it to fail unexpectedly and spent money on risk management vs a good running engine....
i think it took at least 7 years for cadillac to ever address the core issues relaed to those studds.7 years was a LOT of lost buyers, hurt customers, etc
 

SquareRoot

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 18, 2017
Posts
4,192
Reaction score
8,030
Location
Arizona
First Name
Mike
Truck Year
85
Truck Model
K20
Engine Size
350
Here we go...
 

Attachments

  • rabbit-hole.jpeg
    rabbit-hole.jpeg
    179.8 KB · Views: 56

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
44,160
Posts
950,626
Members
36,273
Latest member
dannyphx
Top