I just made my annual trip to Alaska from Illinois, and this year I pulled a 15,000 lb load (tractor) behind. Some record temps were in northern Canada and Alaska (90 deg the last 1000+ miles). I think I encountered the worst set of conditions: there are some really long grades in northern BC, it was about 90 deg, the wind was blowing WITH me a little bit, and my truck would overheat before I could make it to the top. I took my bug screen out, which helped a little, but I still would have to pull over on the hill as my temp gauge pegged, leave it idle for a while, the temp would drop to as low as about 210 deg, then take off again, using almost full power to get that load going again! By the time I was up to about 40 mph in 2nd gear, it was time to pull over again! The slower I went, the more it would overheat. I finally figured out that my best bet was to hit the hills at 75-80 mph (yeow!), and keep the egt's at redline (1300 deg), keeping as much power to it as I could. If I could maintain a high speed, then the ram air seemed to keep the engine below redline. If I could not maintain this speed, then I would peg my water temp gauge in no time! Fluid is full, radiator fins not plugged with bugs, and fan SEEMS to be working fine.
Is this normal for the Cummins? I was really asking a lot of my truck on this trip (I weighed the entire set up on a CAT scale, over 22,000 lbs), redlining water temps and egt's for hour after hour, but have other people had this overheating issue, or is something a little bit wrong? Thanks!
John
Is this normal for the Cummins? I was really asking a lot of my truck on this trip (I weighed the entire set up on a CAT scale, over 22,000 lbs), redlining water temps and egt's for hour after hour, but have other people had this overheating issue, or is something a little bit wrong? Thanks!
John