HHhuntitall
TDR MEMBER
Last year, I purchased two engines removed from '96 Ford F-650s purchased by the City of Los Angeles. As I understand it, the trucks were driven to the nearest dealer and the diesel engine removed and replaced with a natural gas motor. The medium duty engines I bought had 73 and 103 miles on them. I put the latter in my '97 3500 and since have had a few problems. These engines were in front of Allison automatics, and the cams are timed at 11degrees, if I'm not mistaken. Now, that's fine and dandy, except I put a 6speed in my '97, and I am off road very frequently, usually at lower RPMs in lower gears, often with a trailer. The problem I'm having is excessive fuel usage and slow response, and the smoke to follow. I've adjusted the pump in every direction, even too far, with a blown head gasket to prove it(should've ordered a cam from Piers or Sheid then!!). I've thought about a new cam, but I don't want to pull the head again for the lifters. That's when I thought about jumping a gear on the cam. That's 2. 5 degrees one way(360 degrees/72 teeth/2 camshaft speed to crank), which would put the cam at 13. 5, right? What's that gonna do to pump timing, too? I've never fooled with camshaft timing on a Cummins, but I know on a Gas engine, you have to adjust timing to increase torque. And on a Chrysler RB-block, i usually like to have my cams around 14-16 degrees. Anyway, who can help me here? I'm planning on wood-doweling the lifters up, pulling out the cam just far enough to turn it one tooth. I guess that's gonna leave the pump timing alone, as BDC on the valves is going to stay at the same place, right? I've got the pump "adjusted" past where it should be, which doesn't help the smoke, but I need it to pull like the old motor. It's great over about 1600 RPM, building boost and not smoking like it should, but I'm guessing that's because it was for an automatic. One of you 12 valve racers has got to have tried this before. Help me out, please!