Winspeed- You were doing pretty good until you said that heating the intake air when the engine was cold was of no benefit. When while white smoke is coming out of the exhaust then liquid fuel is surely going into the crank case-period and not good. Your theory about the grid heater acting like "reverse intercooler". Just not so. The grid heater is no hotter than any of the plumbing or cylinder head that are all down stream of the intercooler. Please post test data if you can because it surely conflicts with what I have seen from Cummins. I guess I do believe that the grid heater acts a restriction on an 800+ hp engine and I have said as much in previous posts. But I do not think that is where most TDR members are operating their engines.
If you are trying to tell me that Cummins would put something in the intake (grid is not an emission control device) that would increase the EGT and reduce the thermal efficiency of their engine, I know those folks, they know a lot more about that engine than you or I do and that's not something they would do. BTW, I can assure you Cummins engineering has beat a lot more crap out of that engine than you have!
Lastly, I have to ask why have you had the cylinder head off you engine with less than 130K miles? Is that something that should be done as well?
Regards,
Like I said, There is always someone. I'm not on here trying to argue with anyone. Just sharing information on what I know and my personal opinion about this subject. If you would like to discredit my experience and knowledge, thats your porogative. But I have extensively tested these delete spacers. Erik at TVP recently tested one on a basically stock truck. His unbias findings were consistant with mine, and he is in no way associated with my shop.
First off, show me in my post where I said a heater grid is not a benifet a motor in cold weather? Here is my exact quote "If you are in a super cold climate, the truck will start easier with the heater grid. But they are easy to change for the winter time. "
And who said anything about white smoke? I agree, if your truck is puking white smoke, that is an unburnt fuel problem. And you should put the heater back in. However, Do I think people get way too paranoid about this? Yes. It's been my experience that it takes a lot to wash the cylinders enough to ruin the motor. When its real cold outside my truck will emit white smoke, but I'm not worried about it, it clears up in a few seconds. I have pulled my head on several occasions in the pursuit of more power(Porting, O-ringing etc. . ) and there is still cross hatch on the cylinder walls. It looks new. A lot of heavily moded motors will have so low of compression that they puke white smoke even when warm, its the same principal.
By the way, your intercooler does cool the intake charge too that below the engine temp. And the heat soak of the engine does heat the metal ribbon in the heater grid to that of the motor, which in turn has a negative effect on intake temp. 50 deg is what I have measured on an IAT sensor in the intake valley. The boost temp may increase to above that in the higher RPM's depending on your set up, and at that point the metal ribbon is a restriction. Just the facts.
Is this product for everybody? No it's not. Will your motor run better without it? Definetly, but you may need it to start the truck and get it to operating temp depending on your climate.