Ever since I became a diesel-head a year ago, I've been slightly paranoid about 'diesel runaway'. Just reading about this, here and elsewhere, is enough to make the hair stand up on the back of my neck. I realize its a one-in-a-million phenomenon, and can probably be avoided by taking care of your turbo, but paranoia is never trumped by mere rationality.
So, of course, I keep a dry chemical fire extinguisher in my cab, and like the instructions in the owners manual say I'm prepared to fire it into the air intake if a runaway situation ever develops. But I've never been quite satisfied with this solution, for two reasons:
1. If my aFe air filter is really doing its job, the powder shouldn't get into the engine very well at all, and
2. Even if the powder does get in and extinguishes the runaway, I'd still be left with a ruined engine from all that powder residue in the cylinders and the charge air circuit. Hey, if I'm gonna destroy my engine either way, I think I'd rather just stand back and watch the Cummins blow itself to smithereens!
I know there are other solutions, involving installing a kill valve on the intake manifold, but the odds of me ever actually doing that are low to say the least.
So... I've just bought me a Halon fire extinguisher and mounted it in the bed just in front of the tailgate. For those who don't know, Halon is a freon gas, once very popular for extinguishing fires around equipment, such as computers, that would be damaged by dry chemical fire extinguishers. It is now illegal to manufacture the Halon compound (due to that whole hole-in-the-ozone-layer thing), but there are still a lot of grandfathered Halon extinguishers out there that are perfectly legal to buy, own and use. Because Halon is a gas, not a powder, it doesn't leave any residue, and so doesn't damage the things you spray it on or into. Also, as a gas, it should suck right through the air filter. You can still buy these babies from fire extinguisher companies, but the prices are sky-high... like $250 for a relatively small extinguisher. I bought mine on E-Bay, used but freshly tested and re-certified, for about $80.
Just FYI.
So, of course, I keep a dry chemical fire extinguisher in my cab, and like the instructions in the owners manual say I'm prepared to fire it into the air intake if a runaway situation ever develops. But I've never been quite satisfied with this solution, for two reasons:
1. If my aFe air filter is really doing its job, the powder shouldn't get into the engine very well at all, and
2. Even if the powder does get in and extinguishes the runaway, I'd still be left with a ruined engine from all that powder residue in the cylinders and the charge air circuit. Hey, if I'm gonna destroy my engine either way, I think I'd rather just stand back and watch the Cummins blow itself to smithereens!
I know there are other solutions, involving installing a kill valve on the intake manifold, but the odds of me ever actually doing that are low to say the least.
So... I've just bought me a Halon fire extinguisher and mounted it in the bed just in front of the tailgate. For those who don't know, Halon is a freon gas, once very popular for extinguishing fires around equipment, such as computers, that would be damaged by dry chemical fire extinguishers. It is now illegal to manufacture the Halon compound (due to that whole hole-in-the-ozone-layer thing), but there are still a lot of grandfathered Halon extinguishers out there that are perfectly legal to buy, own and use. Because Halon is a gas, not a powder, it doesn't leave any residue, and so doesn't damage the things you spray it on or into. Also, as a gas, it should suck right through the air filter. You can still buy these babies from fire extinguisher companies, but the prices are sky-high... like $250 for a relatively small extinguisher. I bought mine on E-Bay, used but freshly tested and re-certified, for about $80.
Just FYI.