My friend had his 98. 5 jell up and it had to be towed 30 miles and then be put in the dealer's warm shop. He thought he had winterized fuel, but obviously not winterized enough.
He said his 94 had a fuel heater in the fuel filter and that warm fuel circulated back to the tank. He never had a problem with that cummins.
Do the 98. 5 and newer trucks have a fuel heater and if not I wonder why DC eliminated this very valuable item for folks that live where it can get 40 - 50 degrees below zero? Plugging it in takes care of starting, but jelled fuel will happen going down the road.
I'd appreciate any help on this. I did a search, but couldn't determine whether there is a fuel heater on the newer trucks.
Thanks, Charlie
He said his 94 had a fuel heater in the fuel filter and that warm fuel circulated back to the tank. He never had a problem with that cummins.
Do the 98. 5 and newer trucks have a fuel heater and if not I wonder why DC eliminated this very valuable item for folks that live where it can get 40 - 50 degrees below zero? Plugging it in takes care of starting, but jelled fuel will happen going down the road.
I'd appreciate any help on this. I did a search, but couldn't determine whether there is a fuel heater on the newer trucks.
Thanks, Charlie