I just finished reinstalling my engine. I chose to have it rebuilt by a local shop (Knighton's Automotive machining in Albuquerque). I spent the time to pull it myself and reinstall it myself.
On the initial start I find I am losing oil pressure. Yes, I am using the stock oil pressure switch from OBDII rather than a proper oil pressure gauge. That is why I am posting here in the flame free zone as I am not in the market for information about why I should put in a real oil pressure gauge.
I took videos of each time I cranked it so I could go back through the gauges and see what happened. It feels like it started fine and sounds good. After reviewing the videos I see the following:
I cranked it 4 times without starting it for 2, 3, 4 and 8 seconds respectively. Before and after each time I left the key in the on position to let the lift pump fill everything up. I added a fuel filter while I was doing this project so I don't go through another set of injectors, so I figured it needs time to fill.
After those 4 cranks (with nothing disabled) it fired up and oil pressure came right up. It ran for 37 seconds at idle and then lost oil pressure. I shut it off right away and checked fluids. Fluids are kind of tricky after a project this big as everything needs to fill various coolers and such so I started with everything overfilled. I added some coolant, some transmission fluid, and some to the power steering circuit. The engine oil still showed too high.
It has now run for 223 seconds and dropped oil pressure 3 times. Each time I shut it off and checked oil and for leaks. No issues.
Your thoughts are greatly appreciated.
I am trying to decide. Is this kind of normal with a new engine where the oil is going all kinds of places and needs to fill things up. Or, is this a bad sign and I need to stop and call the engine builder and scream?
I insisted on a genuine Cummins oil pump rather than the standard aftermarket one they normally use.
Truck is a 2006 4X4 Dually, quad cab, automatic. 120,000 miles. The first 30,000 I put on her were rough as I did not understand about diesels and maintenance. I learned better a few years ago, but the new engine is me paying the bill for my previous ignorance.
Thanks.
On the initial start I find I am losing oil pressure. Yes, I am using the stock oil pressure switch from OBDII rather than a proper oil pressure gauge. That is why I am posting here in the flame free zone as I am not in the market for information about why I should put in a real oil pressure gauge.
I took videos of each time I cranked it so I could go back through the gauges and see what happened. It feels like it started fine and sounds good. After reviewing the videos I see the following:
I cranked it 4 times without starting it for 2, 3, 4 and 8 seconds respectively. Before and after each time I left the key in the on position to let the lift pump fill everything up. I added a fuel filter while I was doing this project so I don't go through another set of injectors, so I figured it needs time to fill.
After those 4 cranks (with nothing disabled) it fired up and oil pressure came right up. It ran for 37 seconds at idle and then lost oil pressure. I shut it off right away and checked fluids. Fluids are kind of tricky after a project this big as everything needs to fill various coolers and such so I started with everything overfilled. I added some coolant, some transmission fluid, and some to the power steering circuit. The engine oil still showed too high.
It has now run for 223 seconds and dropped oil pressure 3 times. Each time I shut it off and checked oil and for leaks. No issues.
Your thoughts are greatly appreciated.
I am trying to decide. Is this kind of normal with a new engine where the oil is going all kinds of places and needs to fill things up. Or, is this a bad sign and I need to stop and call the engine builder and scream?
I insisted on a genuine Cummins oil pump rather than the standard aftermarket one they normally use.
Truck is a 2006 4X4 Dually, quad cab, automatic. 120,000 miles. The first 30,000 I put on her were rough as I did not understand about diesels and maintenance. I learned better a few years ago, but the new engine is me paying the bill for my previous ignorance.
Thanks.