I recently learned something new about my truck. It has led a pampered life spending 99% of its nights securely parked in my insulated steel building out back.
About ten days ago I hooked up and pulled the fifthwheel out of the barn and parked on the front driveway next to the house overnight because we were leaving on a short RV vacation that morning.
When I went out to start the truck the temp was in the mid-20s and a coating of ice covered the windshield. I started the truck and let it slow idle for a minute or two then activated the fast idle with the cruise buttons.
I bumped the engine speed up in 100 rpm increments watching the EGT gauge for results. At 1400 rpm the exhaust brake was still closed and the pyro was indicating upward of 450*. I bumped the ACCEL button one more time and when the tach moved to 1500 rpm the exhaust brake opened and the pyro temp dropped. Obviously fast warm-up terminated.
It took me only four years and 111k miles to learn this. I had used the fast idle a thousand times. I use it routinely in hot weather if leaving the a/c running with my dogs inside and have used it many times in cold weather for warm-up or to keep the engine warm but I guess I had never bumped the fast idle all the way to 1500 rpm.
At a fast idle of 1400 rpm the engine quickly warmed enough to clear the windshield and warm the cab. I was silently thanking Cummins engineers for programming the engine to use fast idle and the VGT to quickly warm a cold engine and cold truck.
I realize some of you are thinking "mid-20s!" "That's a summer day up north. "
I know. I remember full well what winter temps were like when I was transporting.
About ten days ago I hooked up and pulled the fifthwheel out of the barn and parked on the front driveway next to the house overnight because we were leaving on a short RV vacation that morning.
When I went out to start the truck the temp was in the mid-20s and a coating of ice covered the windshield. I started the truck and let it slow idle for a minute or two then activated the fast idle with the cruise buttons.
I bumped the engine speed up in 100 rpm increments watching the EGT gauge for results. At 1400 rpm the exhaust brake was still closed and the pyro was indicating upward of 450*. I bumped the ACCEL button one more time and when the tach moved to 1500 rpm the exhaust brake opened and the pyro temp dropped. Obviously fast warm-up terminated.
It took me only four years and 111k miles to learn this. I had used the fast idle a thousand times. I use it routinely in hot weather if leaving the a/c running with my dogs inside and have used it many times in cold weather for warm-up or to keep the engine warm but I guess I had never bumped the fast idle all the way to 1500 rpm.
At a fast idle of 1400 rpm the engine quickly warmed enough to clear the windshield and warm the cab. I was silently thanking Cummins engineers for programming the engine to use fast idle and the VGT to quickly warm a cold engine and cold truck.
I realize some of you are thinking "mid-20s!" "That's a summer day up north. "
I know. I remember full well what winter temps were like when I was transporting.