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i would think a clogged injector which would caue a lean condition which could melt a piston due to detonation
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a clogged injector will cause a lean or no fire condition,a leaking injector will cause an overfuel condition. An injector is merely a valve of a sort, machined surfaces with a poppet and springs, if a part had gotten moisture on it, or maybe moisture was in fuel system, and sitting that long, it'll cause damage..i would think a clogged injector which would caue a lean condition which could melt a piston due to detonation
I remember reading that but had forgotten since mine is not yet on the road. As little as I start mine now and probably in the future, I probably go through the manual and creat a laminated check list for start up and shut down like pilots have untill its ingrained in memory and to educate anyone else that may drive it. ThanksI am not a diesel mechanic, I don't play one on TV and I did not sleep in a Holiday Inn last night but based on this statement and the photographs "the truck stops, engine knocks, no power, black smoke and goes out," I think it is over fuel in that cylinder.
You said the IP had issues including a stuck fuel cutoff so I am thinking that the injector for that cylinder did not close properly and the excess fuel caused higher temperatures and pressures. Perhaps if all the fuel was not burned there could have been liquid fuel in that cylinder that does not compress leading to a damaged piston and bent rod.
The operators manual talks about turning the engine over before starting (fuel shut off out) to check for hydrostatic lock.
These are out of engines that were under 2K hours and were both running perfect.Something no one has covered is cracks in the top of the pistons. I have pulled apart several multifuels and all of them had small cracks around the swirl chamber in the top of the piston.
I have some pictures at home and if I remember, I will post them after work.
I do not know if they are caused by inexperienced (or careless) drivers lugging the engine or the multifuel's 22:1 compression ratio.
I figured since I had to pull the engine I may as well rebuild the hole thing. I sleeved the cylinder and bought one new piston. All is well and running great. Yes your piston damage looks alot like mine except mine was a little worse.Clinto thanks for the pics, really disturbing, the question is was it an individual case
@Parker2 Does the the piston from your cummins same looking ike this one, you change piston/liner and injector and everything was fine?
Well, the exhaust manifold is divided, so you can install one thermocouple in each and display the two readings on one gauge (center gauge in image below). This arrangement provides a reference in case one cylinder is misbehaving........
As for a pyrometer - I have one and was watching it. It turns out if one cylinder is overfueling it doesnt really show up on the pyrometer. The pyro is showing the total of all cylinders not just one.........
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