'92 D250 with 180K, bone stock. Never any trouble 'til a few months back. Power down, extremely sluggish the first few miles when cold. Like a roadblock. bicycles were passing me away from the traffic light.
Went to the "experts" at Cummins South Pacific for pro diagnostics, super expensive" shop, but I wanted the experts to tell me what's wrong with my truck. They checked everything for hours (at $91 per hour), diagnosed weak VE fuel injection pump and lift pump. Replaced both, injection pump twice (somethin' broke inside the one I got after 86 miles!). The whole thing has cost me north of $3,5K now. Performance still not up to where it was before I noticed lack of power.
First I though . . . maybe my original pump was turned up, that's why it feels like I don't have enough power, so I'm ready to turn up the pump, as per instructions on this Web site.
Just when I'm about to do it, I have another really bad morning, cold, like California cold (about 55 degrees), and my truck feels soooo slow, doesn't want to get up to speed, feels like its holding the first gear, doesn't get enough juice to get up to speed to shift to second.
That got me thinking. What if I have a torque converter or transmission problem? If I rev the engine in neutral, it revs up happily. Just when I DRIVE the truck, especially COLD for the first mile or two, it's almost unbearable. Once it's warmed up, it's ALMOST as good as it used to be. Almost.
Question: how should I proceed? Can it be the torque converter or transmission? If so, which one? Why is it so noticable when cold? Shouldn't cold (thick) trans fluid be more powerful than hot (thinnner) one?
Lotsa questions, I know, but after spending a fortune, I don't want to buy a new converter, or 727 OD trans, or both, only to find out it wasn't the problem.
If I go to a trans shop, they'll sell me somethin', that's for sure.
What to do, and in what order?
Went to the "experts" at Cummins South Pacific for pro diagnostics, super expensive" shop, but I wanted the experts to tell me what's wrong with my truck. They checked everything for hours (at $91 per hour), diagnosed weak VE fuel injection pump and lift pump. Replaced both, injection pump twice (somethin' broke inside the one I got after 86 miles!). The whole thing has cost me north of $3,5K now. Performance still not up to where it was before I noticed lack of power.
First I though . . . maybe my original pump was turned up, that's why it feels like I don't have enough power, so I'm ready to turn up the pump, as per instructions on this Web site.
Just when I'm about to do it, I have another really bad morning, cold, like California cold (about 55 degrees), and my truck feels soooo slow, doesn't want to get up to speed, feels like its holding the first gear, doesn't get enough juice to get up to speed to shift to second.
That got me thinking. What if I have a torque converter or transmission problem? If I rev the engine in neutral, it revs up happily. Just when I DRIVE the truck, especially COLD for the first mile or two, it's almost unbearable. Once it's warmed up, it's ALMOST as good as it used to be. Almost.
Question: how should I proceed? Can it be the torque converter or transmission? If so, which one? Why is it so noticable when cold? Shouldn't cold (thick) trans fluid be more powerful than hot (thinnner) one?
Lotsa questions, I know, but after spending a fortune, I don't want to buy a new converter, or 727 OD trans, or both, only to find out it wasn't the problem.
If I go to a trans shop, they'll sell me somethin', that's for sure.
What to do, and in what order?