I'm somewhat amazed that despite all the experience on this forum, no one can give me a straight answer on this.
JR, the 6.7s in the C&Cs have a different cam than the p/u's. Not sure if that's all that's different.
The EGR system is totally different as well.....I thought most of us gave pretty good answers, based upon how much we're paid. I've only owned 6.7s in C&Cs. I've never had any message display regarding regen or DPF. I think that might be a good thing. No problems so far.
JR, the 6.7s in the C&Cs have a different cam than the p/u's. Not sure if that's all that's different.
Exhaust System — Regeneration Required Now —
Exhaust Filter XX% Full Safely Drive at Highway Speeds to Remedy will be displayed in the instrument
cluster display if the exhaust particulate filter reaches 80% of its maximum storage capacity. Under conditions of exclusive short duration and low speed driving cycles, your Cummins diesel engine and exhaust aftertreatment system may never reach the conditions required to remove the trapped PM. If this occurs, the “Exhaust Filter XX% Full Safely Drive at Highway Speeds to Remedy” message will be displayed in the instrument cluster display. If this message is displayed, you will hear one chime to assist in alerting you of this condition
• By simply driving your vehicle at highway speeds for as little as 45 minutes, you can remedy the condition in the particulate filter system and allow your Cummins diesel engine and exhaust after-treatment system to remove the trapped PM and restore the system to normal operating condition.
This info is for a 3rd gen.
But still generally relevant to our 4th gen trucks as well to my understanding and confirmed by those in the know on this 4th gen forum
https://www.turbodieselregister.com...ing-is-acceptable-says-dodge-engineer.206997/
So you can let your truck idle while Ford and GM owners have to automatically shut down after idling five minutes or risk fines in these states. "
Changing to a more challenging duty cycle, such as highway driving.
That conversation was in regards to a C&C truck....does all of that apply to a regular 2500/3500 pickup?
Also, I do think that FCA engineer ate his own words a bit on that discussion; I mean after all, those early 6.7l's without the SCR turned out to be very unreliable outside of pure highway driving.
Did the early C&C trucks have SCR from the get-go?
The SCR was introduced to the 4500/5500 earlier than the 3500 to my knowledge.
But this statement is where he says it applies to both C&C and pickups
In summary he stated clearly and without any ambiguity whatsoever that owners of cab and chassis trucks and pickups can idle their trucks as long as they wish. He specifically stated we can idle them all day or all night if we want to. I asked if it should be at low idle or high idle. He stated clearly again, "it doesn't matter. "
You’re not one of those Sovereign Citizen guys, are ya???If I'm done traveling, the engine gets turned off (I allow the turbo's to cool depending upon my usage).
Okay, but the guidance from that engineer doesn't match up with the pages you've posted....
The engineer says its okay to idle the engine for long periods of time.
The Ram literature is saying that you shouldn't idle for long periods of time and also that the SCR needs highway speeds to clean itself (I wasn't even aware that was a requirement for the SCR).
For the record, I'm not looking to idle my engine for long periods of time. If I'm using the truck, it's to go somewhere. If I'm done traveling, the engine gets turned off (I allow the turbo's to cool depending upon my usage). But if I'm in the middle of a 4x4 road and all of a sudden the DPF or SCR dashboard indicator tells me I need to drive at highway speeds, what are my options?