Alex400
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I have been looking at the threads about upping the fuel, high egt's and the quest for more power out of the deuce. In several threads, i read about the oliver pulling tractors with the ld 465 making all kinds of horsepower with stock bottom end and slightly modified stock pistons. I believe that entirely. From reading this, I figure that yes the deuce has the same basic motor as the tractor, but the major difference is the compression. The multifuel compression of 22:1 is not conducive to low egt's of any kind, especially when you add boost. THinking about most modern diesel's that are making of 300 hp reliably have around 17:1 compression, it would make sense that to make the deuce make more power you would need lower compression. The biggest thing allows the deuce to burn anything is the high compression and combustion chamber design.
So i guess what i am asking is, would it be more lucrative to get the pistons out of the white tractor motor that produce 17:1 compression and add a larger turbo to the deuce in hopes getting more reliable power? the fuel obviously would turned up too. I figure with the lower compression, a larger turbo, and the fuel turned up, that the engine could easily handle 25-35 pounds of boost regularly and get it over 200 hp and 450 ft lbs of torque. that being said, with the increase power you would not have to run the engine at 100% all of the time like you might of had too before. The tractor pull guys are running the engine at 100% the time. for the truck you would not being doing that when you are running down the road and if you are it is only for short bursts to get up to speed.
i am throwing this out there because i would like to here your guy's opinions on the subject.
So i guess what i am asking is, would it be more lucrative to get the pistons out of the white tractor motor that produce 17:1 compression and add a larger turbo to the deuce in hopes getting more reliable power? the fuel obviously would turned up too. I figure with the lower compression, a larger turbo, and the fuel turned up, that the engine could easily handle 25-35 pounds of boost regularly and get it over 200 hp and 450 ft lbs of torque. that being said, with the increase power you would not have to run the engine at 100% all of the time like you might of had too before. The tractor pull guys are running the engine at 100% the time. for the truck you would not being doing that when you are running down the road and if you are it is only for short bursts to get up to speed.
i am throwing this out there because i would like to here your guy's opinions on the subject.
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