Delicious Clint
New member
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- Location
- Portland, OR
New to the forum AND to this style of vehicle (no, I cannot explain WHY I bought it but if you have any insight, feel free....) but am mighty happy to have a great cross-country trip under my belt that got me comfortable with the rig. I'm young enough (early 40's) to have SOME memory of smoky diesel engines but most of my adult life has been spent with very clean diesels. This is obviously not one of them.
I can see and understand the correlation between RPM's and smoke -- my M109 lays down a helluva smokescreen when dropping down to 1500 rpm going uphill. Typical example: hitting a hill on a 2-lane road at 50mph/5th gear/2200rpm. By the time we slowed to 46mph/5th/2000rpm we're putting out a haze. Backing off on the accelerator allows me to drop speed/rpm down to 35/1500 where I can engage 4th gear. If I don't back off, we lay down a pretty good smoke trail (black) lugging the engine over the top of the hill. Yes, it is obvious to me that lugging the engine down under 1200 rpm is awful and I don't do it. Dropping to 4th and hitting the accelerator usually gives a blip of smoke and if it's a moderate grade we'll go right up at 38mph/4th/2000-2200rpm. If we have to drop again it's the same thing....when rpm drops into the teens, we start laying the trail for everyone following behind. When the rpm's are between 2100-2300 we're clean and happy.
In reading the forums I believe I understand this to be fairly normal. The color is fine. The engine is responding as expected and seems to be running great although I think my idle is a little low -- 600-700 when starting/cold.
Is there anything that can be done to minimize the "dirty" look of these engines? It is a bit embarrassing to run around this gorgeous country spewing crap. It certainly makes me more aware of keeping my rpm's in range but the gearing is a bit awkward for that -- this truck could really use additional gears!
This is the perfect truck for what I am going to be doing with it (Baja, Nevada, remote canyon camping with river crossings) and it's function is NOT to be run in the city, anyway. But any input on how to reduce excessive smoking would be much appreciated or any pointers on something that I may well be missing in my inexperience.
Thanks!
I can see and understand the correlation between RPM's and smoke -- my M109 lays down a helluva smokescreen when dropping down to 1500 rpm going uphill. Typical example: hitting a hill on a 2-lane road at 50mph/5th gear/2200rpm. By the time we slowed to 46mph/5th/2000rpm we're putting out a haze. Backing off on the accelerator allows me to drop speed/rpm down to 35/1500 where I can engage 4th gear. If I don't back off, we lay down a pretty good smoke trail (black) lugging the engine over the top of the hill. Yes, it is obvious to me that lugging the engine down under 1200 rpm is awful and I don't do it. Dropping to 4th and hitting the accelerator usually gives a blip of smoke and if it's a moderate grade we'll go right up at 38mph/4th/2000-2200rpm. If we have to drop again it's the same thing....when rpm drops into the teens, we start laying the trail for everyone following behind. When the rpm's are between 2100-2300 we're clean and happy.
In reading the forums I believe I understand this to be fairly normal. The color is fine. The engine is responding as expected and seems to be running great although I think my idle is a little low -- 600-700 when starting/cold.
Is there anything that can be done to minimize the "dirty" look of these engines? It is a bit embarrassing to run around this gorgeous country spewing crap. It certainly makes me more aware of keeping my rpm's in range but the gearing is a bit awkward for that -- this truck could really use additional gears!
This is the perfect truck for what I am going to be doing with it (Baja, Nevada, remote canyon camping with river crossings) and it's function is NOT to be run in the city, anyway. But any input on how to reduce excessive smoking would be much appreciated or any pointers on something that I may well be missing in my inexperience.
Thanks!