sandcobra164
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I thought I'd bounce some ideas off some smart guy's heads. In the past, I'd put the deuce to bed this time of year and I did the same thing with the 5 ton as well for the last 2 years. The deuce always started easy and of course the 250 in the 5 ton does not. I started the 5 ton up this afternoon at 41 degrees after sitting for who knows how long. I hooked the jumper cables from the CUCV just to be sure. I let the 5 ton run for 15 minutes to warm up and circulate the oil. I then put it at a 1,600 fast idle with the hand throttle and let it run for an hour at that speed.
Now to the question, would it be better to just let the engine wait out the cold weather or is it better to run it weekly at a high idle? I know letting a diesel run at normal idle (600 rpm) is bad. Tonight, I finally heard the shutterstat engage the fan and the truck finally hit 200 degrees on the gauge. It's never gotten that hot before running down the road but that's got to be better than letting it sit still.
Now to the question, would it be better to just let the engine wait out the cold weather or is it better to run it weekly at a high idle? I know letting a diesel run at normal idle (600 rpm) is bad. Tonight, I finally heard the shutterstat engage the fan and the truck finally hit 200 degrees on the gauge. It's never gotten that hot before running down the road but that's got to be better than letting it sit still.