:-{} Most interesting. One of the very first things I did when I got this machine, was to accumulate (from EBay mostly) older Cummins service, operating, and troubleshooting manuals. I was fully aware that the current crop of 5. 9's are quite a bit different, and that is why I jumped on this "1st Gen" board. My artificial knowledge comes pretty much from those Cummins publications period.
In going back thru them, in one place it indicates that the B stands for Automotive. In others they clearly show the B model series, using the B in industrial applications. In the BIG "B Series Shop Manual" 1994 edition, they indicate that the difference between "automotive" and "industrial", the only two types they claim to produce, is that the number of cyl is not used in the nomenclature. Their example is that a 4BTA3. 9 is an industrial engine, and a B5. 9 - 190 would be an automotive engine (190 hp example). Another 2000 edition manual is labeled "Operation and Maintenance Manual Automotive, Recreational Vehicle, Bus, and Industrial B5. 9 Series Engines. In another 1991 publication, they repeat that all automotive engines are turbocharged, and that the nomemclature for automotive engines, which they say are used in "Delivery Trucks, Yard Tractors, Small Moving Vans, etc" do not use the number of cylinders or the T for Turbo in the designation.
I guess I can conclude that back in those days, there was not actually an industrial and an automotive build, just options that made the B series more useable in each type application.
The only mention of a grid heater, states (Cummins talking now) that "It is available for B Series automotive ratings with an in-line injection fuel pump and industrial jacket water aftercooled with a Bosch in-line injection pump". Since mine has the VE44 rotary injection pump, that alone would explain why I have no grid heater. Comments to Cummins stuff and Dodge guys? If I recall correctly, did Dodge not use the rotary VE pump in the very first editions? Did they use a heater grid in them? What do they use as engine nomenclature?:{
I gotta go work on it now, later.