The number 4 piston on my 1990 Cummins diesel melted down. It also scored the cylinder walls on the adjoining cylinders. When we were driving it we heard a noise, the temp gauge started to climb, when we pulled over it died and wouldn't restart.
I have bigger injectors, pump turned up, the smokey pin, 12 cm exhaust housing, and 3 inch straight exhaust. The exhaust temp gauge never got over 1000 degrees but it seemed like the truck was lugging a lot more than it should have. I was only pulling a trailer weighing about 6,000 gross lbs. It also was running on the warm side of the gauge.
Any ideas what might have caused this. I am going to have all the injectors checked out. The turbo is damaged now, but not sure if that was before or after it blow up. The truck, besides being short on power wasn't missing or smoking excessively.
Any ideas would be appreciated. Also, this truck has over 400,000 miles on it--but I don't think this is a fatigue issue, or is it?
Thanks,
Jason
I have bigger injectors, pump turned up, the smokey pin, 12 cm exhaust housing, and 3 inch straight exhaust. The exhaust temp gauge never got over 1000 degrees but it seemed like the truck was lugging a lot more than it should have. I was only pulling a trailer weighing about 6,000 gross lbs. It also was running on the warm side of the gauge.
Any ideas what might have caused this. I am going to have all the injectors checked out. The turbo is damaged now, but not sure if that was before or after it blow up. The truck, besides being short on power wasn't missing or smoking excessively.
Any ideas would be appreciated. Also, this truck has over 400,000 miles on it--but I don't think this is a fatigue issue, or is it?
Thanks,
Jason