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Exhaust brake for the VM EcoDiesel

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Why a Ford Tech picked a Ram EcoDiesel for his own truck

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MLee

TDR MEMBER
Just wondering, Has anyone found a Exhaust brake for the EcoDiesel yet? Or is it geared and managed to the point that one is not needed? There is questions on another site that is inquiring about this.
 
I would think any of the remote mounts would work. I have no clue how the engine/transmission would respond to one or if warrantee would be an issue.

Nick
 
Unless the torque converter lockup clutch is commanded to stay locked on deceleration or under braking, an exhaust brake isn't going to do much of anything except heat up the transmission fluid due to fluid shear in the torque converter.

Rusty
 
The ED I towed with for a couple thousand miles was my company car. I do have a 14 Hemi now that I retired.
Although my trailer is only 5,000 lbs, on some grades it could have used an exhaust brake. But for most towing in moderate terrain the engine braking was more than I anticipated. It does down shift more than a truck with an EB but it does a pretty nice job of retarding. I'm assuming the converter stays locked up, but since I never looked with the scan tool I can't say for sure. I would think an aftermarket brake could be added assuming the converter stays locked.
 
I too would own a Ram 1500 with a Hemi if I didn't own/use a large heavy slide in truck camper. Considering the miles I would normally drive without a RV, I could not justify the additional cost of an Eco-diesel and/or the additional maintenance costs.

Bill
 
Normally with cruise control on and set at 55 mph, going down hill the speed picks up at about 64 mph, the 8 speed transmission starts down shifting from 8 to 7, 7, to 6 to bring speed back down to 55 mph I have watch this several times. After reaching 55 mph will hold for about one minute or so and shift up from 6th, to 7th, then back to 8th.
 
Talked to long-time supporter of the TDR, Bruce Sebring at Pacbrake.
Short answer: No
Brief explanation: Unknown of how it would mess with the exhaust aftertreatment and the fact that the little VM engine has hydraulic lifters and the unknown effect the extra backpressure would have on the valvetrain. Two unknowns= NO.

RP
 
Im new to the forum, 17K on an ED with 7 K on a GDE tune. If you purchase this tune you can get the exhaust brake as a $50. option. It opens up the vanes on the turbo as long as these conditions are met:
1. Foot off accelerator pedal
2. 6th gear or lower
3. 2700 RPM or higher.
It works really well. Its pretty seamless. Last month I went through a couple of mountain passes in Colorado. I wasn't towing a lot of weight (3000lbs). Upon cresting Rabbit Ears Pass heading toward Steamboat Springs. I manually selected 6th. Then just let the truck do the work. I only had to touch the brakes once coming into a hairpin.
 
Hopefully GDE made it smart enough to kick this out in case the ABS senses Wheel slip. Otherwise this would be dangerous as hell.
 
Hopefully GDE made it smart enough to kick this out in case the ABS senses Wheel slip. Otherwise this would be dangerous as hell.


Why would it be any different than a Cummins? Do the new trucks have this feature? None of my older trucks do. I have not had this be any issue.

Nick
 
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