...To burn up a diesel engine, you need to make fire. You need lots of air to burn enough fuel to overheat the exhaust system, and to burn the valves. In the rarefied atmosphere above 8500 feet, there isn't enough air to burn the normally allowed amounts of fuel. Diesels just make soot.
-Chuck
chuck, go plug your deuce's intake and drive around w/ your foot on it and report back. or do this on your PSD, Cummins, or Dmax and let me know how that goes.
what you're ignoring is that if you are making
black smoke, the fuel has already been
burnt. you can't "
make soot" w/out burning the fuel!!! if the fuel is burnt, then there is obviously enough O2. now if the exhaust is gray, then there isn't enough O2 to burn the fuel. [people often say "
black smoke is wasted fuel" - that's not true!!!]
so if you've got the fuel burnt but are starving it for air, you're just creating heat. the job of the turbo is not to simply provide more O2; the air charge also
cools the combustion gases. same reason you introduce aftercooling.
example: i've got enough fuel moving through my 5.9 Cummins for 400hp. but my stock turbo doesn't move enough air to keep that cool. so when you jump on the 'go' pedal it smokes like a freight train. it's running, it's burning the fuel, it's not flooding and extinguishing the flame. but my EGT guage will bury into the 1600° peg in about 3 seconds - i don't have enough air to keep the combustion
cool.
oh, and your valves will likely be the last thing to go.