NIsaacs
TDR MEMBER
Pre turbo works, post turbo works. Any pyro is a win win situation. However you install one, it is good stuff. Having driven, bombed and rebuilt Cummins engines for 30 plus years, with NEVER having a failure caused by high exhaust temps, with either style, I doubt post turbo is a concern. Millions of trucks are running post turbo pyros, no problem.
The 500 degree temp difference on a hill, with a load, under acceleration means very little. The post turbo pyro will keep up within seconds with no engine damage. The Cummins will stand short bursts of hight temps, as all the drag racers and sled pullers prove daily.
Usually a hole burned in a piston means a bad injector or faulty piston cooling. High exhaust temps will expand the piston to the point of contact with the cylinder liner causing instant damage. This damage will show at the piston edges. From small scuff marks to piston seizer as the result.
"NICK"
The 500 degree temp difference on a hill, with a load, under acceleration means very little. The post turbo pyro will keep up within seconds with no engine damage. The Cummins will stand short bursts of hight temps, as all the drag racers and sled pullers prove daily.
Usually a hole burned in a piston means a bad injector or faulty piston cooling. High exhaust temps will expand the piston to the point of contact with the cylinder liner causing instant damage. This damage will show at the piston edges. From small scuff marks to piston seizer as the result.
"NICK"