Wife bought AWESOME Brisket sandwiches at Buckees.
you guys are getting wrapped up in this...but how many or who has coked their turbo bearings?.....I'm not saying don't follow the guidance in the owners manual....and I do look at EGT1 on my Scanauge before shutting down....but geeze...don't go crazy...LOL
OK; I do not have a 4th gen truck but I do have the early 6.7L Cummins in my 2008 truck. I added a Smarty S67 in 2009, do to a lot of recalls and visits to the dealer for CEL's and so, forth. When I added the SmartyS67, I all ready had gages that I could monitor Boost, EGT's and the transmission temperatures. Before the install of the Smarty I could never ever get the EGT's below 350F. The truck could idle all day long and the EGT's would still be 350F. When I towed my lighter 5er out west I could easily see 1,450F during REGN after the REGN process was completed the EGT's would drop to around 900F when towing. My EGT's would lower has I pulled into a rest area to around the 400 or 450F range. I would leave the truck idle has I would check my trailer tires with an IFR gun (1 minute) and when I was done the EGT's would be 350F. They would not go any lower than that. So, the engine was shut off and I would use the facilities.
Now my truck has 126,000 + miles on the OD and I still have the original turbo on the engine, it has never been cooked at this temp. When the Smarty was installed I added 60HP/120flb-ft as measured at the rear wheels per MAD's, who sold the Smarty. I still watch my EGT's when towing and non-towing, when I go to turn the engine off after towing my heavier 5er the EGT's at idle will still not go below 300F. This is after pulling into a rest stop and walking around the trailer and truck measuring the wheel temps. So, in my very humble opinion leaving a stock engine idle for 1 to 5 minutes should be sufficient to prevent damage to the current 4th gen turbo design.
Is that the beaver place? I saw the billboards, but didn't stop a week or so ago.
Ron, my younger son has a 2013.5 with a tune from EFIlive and is using the Edge Insight CTS2 that monitors the engine. This has been under the knife since the truck was a Canadian truck and he could not obtain any warranty or recall service in the US, for emission issues. His EGT's are very close to mine within 5 to 10 deg's of my readings at idle.
So, I would think any long term idling would be a waste of fuel and time. If this was my truck and I was towing my Cedar Creek with it, the maximum time I would let the truck idle would be 5 mins. This would include the time from exiting the interstate to the rest area and walking around to check tire temps.
Just my humble opinion.
Ron, my younger son has a 2013.5 with a tune from EFIlive and is using the Edge Insight CTS2 that monitors the engine. This has been under the knife since the truck was a Canadian truck and he could not obtain any warranty or recall service in the US, for emission issues. His EGT's are very close to mine within 5 to 10 deg's of my readings at idle.
So, I would think any long term idling would be a waste of fuel and time. If this was my truck and I was towing my Cedar Creek with it, the maximum time I would let the truck idle would be 5 mins. This would include the time from exiting the interstate to the rest area and walking around to check tire temps.
Just my humble opinion.
Newsa,
When I was at the 2013, Rally for TDR at Columbus IN. in June and the new trucks were rolled out. They were introduced as 2013.5 trucks by the RAM marketing employees there. Since these had a new frame 3500 only for that year and the new emission system with SCR for the Cummins engine and other improvements. Such as the water separator and fuel filter at the rear of the truck, the DEF tank, to name a few. That is why I have referred to them as the 2013.5 models.
That's the way I remember it also.I believe that the RAM folks stated that they did not build any new trucks between Sept. or OCT. 2012 and through the early part of 2013, before the roll-out of the new models with the SCR engines in them. This is what I remember from the rally and I am relying on my memory from 2013 time period so, I could be off on that.
Here's a ref from the Cummins website:
"The MY 2013.5+ Cummins 6.7L Turbo Diesel reduces operating costs in today’s RAM trucks with a new Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) aftertreatment that uses Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF), contributing to a 10 percent increase in fuel economy and best-in-class 15,000-mile oil-change intervals, keeping more of your hard-earned money in your pocket."
So the ref may be for the engine versus the truck?
Cheers, Ron