Oh the memories you bring back

I worked for a pretty large private service in Chicago, (Vandenburg Ambulance) and worked the night shift. We used to "stage" at strategic places throughout the city in what was then termed "status system management". We would find ourselves oftentimes on the lake front waiting for the next call. Those old 6. 9's and early 7. 3's would not maintain any temperature when the -20 windchill was screaming off the lake. And yes, there was no shutting them down!
I remember a couple slow nights being out there and trying to catch a snooze in the back of the ambulance being around 30 degrees inside. Made for some long nights! Quickly learned that thermal underwear was my friend.
But yes, if they had oil in them at the start of the shift, they would make it through the night. They were pretty tough motors for what they were asked to do. The only real problem we had back then was transmissions. I remember the mechanic saying we were only getting about 15k miles out of a transmission rebuild. That might have had something to do with having a bunch of 20 something kids driving them though
For what it is worth, I do know the top speed of an IDI 7. 3 in a type II, (van). 107mph as clocked via the Illinois State Troopers. That was enroute to a particularly bad crash on I-80. I am strangely surprised sometimes that I am here typing stuff such as this and lived through those early years... .