Looks like the upgraded "half shell" design that City Diesel makes and was written up in TDR mag and that Genos sells
I kinda figured since it looks nothing like the OEM. Just looking for clarification.....
Looks like the upgraded "half shell" design that City Diesel makes and was written up in TDR mag and that Genos sells
It’s the whole works from City, not just the half shell.What actuator is that Tramp?
It would really be nice if they made the units here in the states. They are backordered cause the electronics part is made in China.
They didn’t let me in on how they solved the heat cycle issue. Just that they had extensive testing to get it right. Hey China can get things right just look how well this virus is working.... Sorry poor taste joke.
This leads me to an apology. I must have misunderstood and retract my previous statement.Guys just a couple points of clarification. The electronics are not made in China. The raw FR4 the circuit board is made of is however.
...As far as how we have solved the heat issues. In addition to having direct motor-stator to aluminum housing contact for heat sinking see the below copy and paste write up from my email for more design changes.
.
I know of seven trucks locally that had actuator failures, all stock trucks.So are you saying heat is killing the stock actuators? Have you done a failure analysis on them to find the root cause of the failures? Just curious as to what is killing them. Starting to see a lot more lately, especially in trucks that have been deleted and tuned (seems a much higher numbers of failures in them from what I am seeing?).
.
I know of seven trucks locally that had actuator failures, all stock trucks.
Wasn’t trying to argue, just pointing out the ones I know about.Not saying they don't happen in stock trucks, just seem to see a lot more in delete trucks in my experience.
I know pointing anything to deleting immediately sparks a fight back response from the pro delete crowd Lol . Really just wondering what the root cause is and if there is a correlation to anything in particular? Heat, soot build up, etc
.
This leads me to an apology. I must have misunderstood and retract my previous statement.
Anyhow, my CD actuator has been working good, thanks!!
I know of seven trucks locally that had actuator failures, all stock trucks.
So are you saying heat is killing the stock actuators? Have you done a failure analysis on them to find the root cause of the failures? Just curious as to what is killing them. Starting to see a lot more lately, especially in trucks that have been deleted and tuned (seems a much higher numbers of failures in them from what I am seeing?).
.
Thanks for the apology friend, not necessary but appreciated. I hope you didn't take it as us being upset, we just want to get the accurate information out there.
Deleted trucks tend to see a higher duty cycle out of the actuator. My understanding is <- (this could be wrong and I welcome anyone with more knowledge of how the tuning software works to correct me) that when you are writing tuning for these trucks at a specific rpm and load you will have a desired airflow. You will also have a minimum and maximum position allowed out of the actuator that the computer can use to try to obtain that airflow. The factory has fairly tight constraints on that position to stay emissions compliant, however a lot of tuners like to let the computer put it wherever it wants so they enter 0% and 100% for every load position. This means that on a stock truck the actuator tends to make much smaller adjustments at a time, while on some deleted trucks they make sweeping large changes often traveling through much of the allowable range. This increases the stress on the actuator.
We are talking about two different models of actuators, this part of the reply is going to be primarily about the actuators found on trucks after 2012. Heat is one of the two common factors in the failure of these units. When you model electrolytic capacitor expected lifetimes the capacitor will have an expected life hour rating. This rating is accurate if the capacitor is used at the maximum rated temperature and ripple current. As the temperature drops the expected life goes up almost exponentially. For instance a good rule of thumb if the datasheet for the cap doesn't specify is that for every 10°C you drop the temperature the life of the capacitor doubles. This is because electrolytic caps wearing out is related to the evaporation of the fluid inside them. The hotter they get the faster it evaporates and it does not have to be powered on to be evaporating. The neat thing about this is that the failure time is fairly predicable with electrolytics. There will be some differences due to if you have a lot of short trips there is a lot of time the caps spend hot (while the engine is cooling) without the engine actually running. The factory actuators seem to have an expected life of around 5000 hours. Now we have not actually tested these to failure to prove this, but anecdotal evidence seems to point to somewhere around this number.
One of the common failures we see in the late model actuator is a voltage regulation failure, the voltages on the different rails begins to oscillate out of spec. This causes the microcontroller in the actuator to actually intermittently shutdown. Leading to brief losses of communication U010c. At first these losses of communication are quick enough that the driver does not notice any difference in drive-ability but they gradually get longer and more common. Capacitance in most voltage regulation circuit is critical in the regulation and stabilization of the voltages. Fixing this problem is made much more difficult because the factory chose to use a axial capacitor as opposed to a radial. The problem is there are far fewer options for sourcing high temp/ high life capacitors in an axial footprint. Maybe the factory has the resources and capital to fix it but when we were researching for ways to extend the life of these actuators we could not find a suitable cap to significantly extend the life.
The other common cause of failure is that instead of soldering some of the through hole connections, IE the motor windings to the board and the external connector to the board, they chose to use pins with a spring like retention and tight fit and just slip them in. When you build a pcb the holes and vias that have copper all the way through them are typically coated with that conductive coating after manufacturing with a really thin layer of plating. Without that thin layer of coating on the id of the hole the hole or via will not conduct and connect all the layers of copper in the board. A typical value would be .001". I do not want to speculate on what thickness they are using as custom stackups are available but even if it was much thicker it does not fill me with the warm fuzzys thinking about if a very thing layer of plating wears off then my actuator will fail.
The earlier model actuators (2012 and before) are a completely different design. They were actually designed by delphi as opposed to cummins. In my opinion the circuit board is a better design in those models. Ie they use a radial high lifetime capacitor. The connections are actually soldered. However the motor is weaker and encapsulated in plastic making getting heat out of the motor really difficult (really most of the difference appears to be a smaller gear reduction). As the turbo ages this leads to the motor not having enough torque to push the vanes aggressively enough to keep them moving. This is made worse by a different (and inferior) piston ring design on the turbine wheel. This model uses a single piston ring as opposed to 2 piston rings. These piston rings are responsible for keeping exhaust out of the oil in the turbo. However if they get enough wear they will begin to allow some oil into the exhaust. Oil+carbon = sticky mess and the vanes begin to need a good bit of extra umpffh to move. A single piston ring design has been the standard for a long time, however the higher the back pressure the more wear on the piston ring, and these engines see a good bit of backpressure. Especially with exhaust brake useage.
All of the above is true as far as I know however I am far from perfect so I advise against taking it as an infallible truth.
Sorry I posted this under the wrong account this should be posted under Citydiesel not my personal account. -Jason
I hope mine never fails but if it does you'll get my business!
.
I don’t know how many miles you have on your truck or what part of the country you live in, but I have a strong recommendation for you. If you live anywhere near salted roads and you plan on changing it out yourself in the future, remove the bottom left bolt now and completely coat it in anti seize. You will thank yourself later. The stock housing has a window cut in it that exposes the threads of the bottom left bolt. Road grime gets in there and seizes the steel bolt to the aluminum housing. You make up all kinds of new words while trying to get that bolt out.
Great write up! Thanks
For heat related component failure it would seem to reason that guys running higher EGT's often (towing heavy, hot tunes etc) "might" see a lower life expectancy out of the actuator then a guy just commuting with the truck?
Sounds like soot build up (causing it to be hard to move the veins) is not a major factor in the failures? I ask this because there are 2 thought processes out there people are floating, one is replace the actuator and you will be fine (it was just an actuator failure), the other is you need to replace everything because the turbo caused it to fail and it is also going to fail soon as well or cause another actuator failure.
A lot of people also say to run your exhaust brake all the time to exercise the actuator more to avoid soot build up/failures etc. I never bought into that personally because I believe it "wipes" (or moves the veins the full range of motion) at start up and/or shut down anyway.
I hope mine never fails but if it does you'll get my business!
.
You might be able to turn that bolt out far enough to get some anti seize on it without touching the other three bolts.Thanks, good advise!
My truck is a 2016 with 63K right now. Lived part of it's life in Colorado and now in Georgia. Plenty of snow and moisture but thank goodness no salt! (I've seen what the north east vehicle s can look like, ouch). I'll take a look at it and see how hard it is to get to to add something on it anyway. Whoops just read your second post. Not sure I want to go that far? Maybe I'll just try and keep it clean as I can
.