Neosin
New member
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- Houston, Texas
If your blowing lines, get some steel braided lines. Just get some custom ones made.
Go read the posts, to sound like we are in the school yard. You started it. I have no doubt you know these trucks. Granted I don't know them like the back of my hand yet, give me a few months. I'm a very quick learner. I also build race engines and drag cars. I've build a few diesel trucks. Granted this m109a3 is the largest thing i've worked on, i'll have it down in no time. You kind of came at me as a know it all and was gonna put me in my spot for "driving" it without checking the brakes. Sorry I did not throw the first stone here. Listen I don't hold a hard feelings and i'd rather just drop it than continue on it's so school yard. Yes, we all agree you have "thousands" more miles on your truck than mine. Come on give me a break i'm trying to get mine up, so i can be a million mile master like yourself. Okie Dokie?
On to the compression braking. Yes there is no throttle in these diesel engines. However when the piston sucks in air, it then compresses it regaurdless if you add fuel or not. That compression stroke is a force. It doesn't "free spin" just because your not adding fuel. However the compression ratio is 22:1 which is in the high range, compaired to say a duramax or powerstroke with compression ratios of around 16:1 17:1. These trucks can engine brake very well. There you could always add a jake brake to your Duce. This would greatly help engine braking. In fact i'm looking at installing a simple jake brake to mine now after hearing how easy it is to lose the brakes. Having played with a few jake brakes, lol install one on a turbo 475ci 22:1 compression engine and you'll stop very quickly. Check in to it, i think now it's a must on these rigs.
Go read the posts, to sound like we are in the school yard. You started it. I have no doubt you know these trucks. Granted I don't know them like the back of my hand yet, give me a few months. I'm a very quick learner. I also build race engines and drag cars. I've build a few diesel trucks. Granted this m109a3 is the largest thing i've worked on, i'll have it down in no time. You kind of came at me as a know it all and was gonna put me in my spot for "driving" it without checking the brakes. Sorry I did not throw the first stone here. Listen I don't hold a hard feelings and i'd rather just drop it than continue on it's so school yard. Yes, we all agree you have "thousands" more miles on your truck than mine. Come on give me a break i'm trying to get mine up, so i can be a million mile master like yourself. Okie Dokie?
On to the compression braking. Yes there is no throttle in these diesel engines. However when the piston sucks in air, it then compresses it regaurdless if you add fuel or not. That compression stroke is a force. It doesn't "free spin" just because your not adding fuel. However the compression ratio is 22:1 which is in the high range, compaired to say a duramax or powerstroke with compression ratios of around 16:1 17:1. These trucks can engine brake very well. There you could always add a jake brake to your Duce. This would greatly help engine braking. In fact i'm looking at installing a simple jake brake to mine now after hearing how easy it is to lose the brakes. Having played with a few jake brakes, lol install one on a turbo 475ci 22:1 compression engine and you'll stop very quickly. Check in to it, i think now it's a must on these rigs.
I work on my trucks and yes, I've blown brake lines so I know what the story is. If you drive enough miles, you too will have a failure, guarantee it. I've got many many thousands of miles on them. For you to come in here and throw stones at my mechanic ability saying who's not looking at things is kinda premature from a guy who also drives a deuce but doesn't know where to add brake fluid and can't find the cap. At least my brake failures were because of a part failure not running it out of fluid. 2 of your very best sources of info are trying to give you advice and your biting back at them? Now for a little education on compression braking. There is nothing in a diesel to restrict the flow of air through it like a gas motor. An engine is just an air pump and if there is no restriction, the motor will just keep turning as the vehicle pushes it. I'm not speaking of some book terms, my experience is from the drivers seat.