Also, mechanic said that the DR Service Manual allowed too much tolerance, he set them to his Cummins book.
Thanks for the comback everybody. Sure is good to get it from the horses mouth (so to speak). Since I just turned 40K I think I will have it done at 50k. Thre reason I inquired in the first place was the sound of at least one of them that is louder than the others.
Thanks
Walt
I had a mechanic friend who is a former Dodge dealer Cummins tech adjust the valves on my '01 as the owner's manual suggested. He tried to talk me out of it explaining it was rarely needed. As he did the adjustment he said it was really not needed.
I ignored the valve adjustment on my '06 and sold it at 230k miles. Never noticed any increased valve tappet noise or performance degradation.
A computerized assembly adjusts the valve train at Cummins MREP during engine assembly.
IMO it is mostly an unnecessary procedure on the average Dodge-Cummins engine but if done right by a skilled mechanic it doesn't hurt anything.
By the time a performance issue is noticed it will be beyond repair of an adjustment. The valve adjustment should also be looked at as preventative maintenance. If it catches an issue before the loss of 1 out of 100 engines it was certainly worth it for that one owner.
Bob, can out-of-adjustment valves do real damage (assuming we're not talking about being 0. 1" out of adjustment or something really wacky like that)? Have you seen a Cummins come in with damage from out-of-adjustment valves?
What are the potential dangers of neglecting the adjustment (assuming your engine is operating satisfactorily)? Pushrod damage? I imagine valves that are so far out that they're damaging the pushrods would be extraordinarily loud - or am I wrong?
Also, I thought the owners manual specified 150k miles before valve adjustment. Is it actually 100k?
Ryan