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Ambient Temperature Depending Performance


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I agree. I did contact Edge today and they said they'd be happy to take my box and look at it but it's doubtful the box is faulty...he also mentioned that it sounded like a a fueling issue. He said ECM comps and runs way more rich in colder weather and that maybe that's what the problem is. Make me wonder if I block off the grill this winter and let the truck run a little hotter in winter if the problem would simply go away. This experiment is leading me to buy that wifi scan tool to pipe to my iPhone. Then I could check and compare temps and performance with and without blocking grill and see if I see an improvement or elimination of the stumble. 

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Again it about having enough IAT temperature to get the fuel to go bang. Being IAT is based on coolant temperature it important to monitor both coolant and IAT temperature. That's why I marked the gauges with normal ranges for optimal performance. 190 to 200 coolant temperature and 100 to 140 for IAT temperature. Again it's about having the warmth to ignite the fuel.

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Buying the scan tool now. I will find out what's up on both! And that scan tool will be nice for our other vehicles too! 

Thanks for letting me know about it. 

 

I ran a scan tool for a short while the other day and it looked like everything was working ok regarding c temp and iat but I guess their has got to be an issue with one or the other and the grill block off plates should help get temps where they are supposed to be if they are off. I will monitor a few daysafter getting scan tool and report back! Supposed be cold cold later this week. Thanks. 

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This is why people are misled into thinking diesels benefit from true cold air intakes like gasoline engines do.  There's nothing wrong with keeping the intake charge cooler in order to maintain optimal air density, but if those intake temps get so low that it reduces power and mileage then it would seem as a disadvantage.

In defense of that, there are applications and cases where differences apply.

If the Edge comes back fine then it would be interesting to see what your new scan tool reveals is going on in live data. :thumbup2:

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It will be here on Thursday. I have also read up on some engine specs and noticed the 01-02 HO cummins has a different vp-44 than everybody else. 027 and not a 026 hot rod vp. 

The 01-02 HO cummins has a higher compression ratio (17:1) and a lower rate of fueling (600cc)compared to the SO. May be why HO's have more issues with aggressive timing (my set up) and whether fueling is capable of keeping up with it (hence the stumbles when cold).  I am far from understanding diesel engines but learning more each day. So I wonder if due to the engine specs of the HO that it has much less leeway when timing is advanced for the fuel to keep up. Makes me wonder if all 01-02 HO cummins engines have this problem. somebody please set me straight here if I'm wrong. This is interesting none the less. I'm always one who not only wants to solve the problem but understand the reason for the problem as well. 

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Headed home to get my new OBD link for my iphone and REALLY cold weather so I should get some good info in the next few days out of the scantool if I can figure out how to get those PID modes sending me data! :thumbup2: Thanks for all the help and great information here. I've certainly learned more than I ever dreamed and I'm determined to find out why and understand why my HO cummins with EZ(on level 3) and RV275's runs rough when it's cold out. Still yet it doesn't nearly run as rough as a night in jail so I'm really not too concerned except for the fact that if I'm advanced out too much on timing on level 3.  Just don't wan to blow out any pistons that for sure. lot's of other things on my list for my dec. 17th-jan3rd break from work. 

Vacuum pump rebuild and start sanding and priming for a new paint job this spring!!! WHOO-HOOO!

 

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Well I'm not sure if this cold weather issue is causing this or not but I found a fuel leak on the injector line that was hardest to reach to tighten when I put injectors in back in October. Regardless, I'm not sure how I'm gonna tighten it. Can't really reach it with my tools but I gotta get it tightened up for sure. Maybe it fuels ok with leak but when timing advances in cold weather maybe it can't keep up? Just thinking out loud here. lol

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OMG!!!!! I checked over my intake manifold bolts and I'm missing one!!! AHHHHH! Who knows how long that bolt has been out but I would imagine that would hurt my performance for sure!!!!! I sure hope I didn't mess up anything major guess I would have more problems if that was the case. I was still making 30psi boost even with that bolt out. I'll bet you installing this bolt and torquing the leaky fuel lines will solve my "man made" problems... sheesh. smh. 

I'm down for a few days. Have the hood off for primer and while it's off, I'm gonna fix a leaky vacuum pump seal then double and triple check all my bolts! man...how stupid...

 

 

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I keep running into more and more discoveries. Apparantly the PO burned up a VP-44 at 36k (from what he told me when I purchased truck at 83k mi. He sprang for a reman'd pump and I did a search on the Bosch reman'd pump he installed and it's for a SO truck not HO! Apparently that's ok but putting an HO pump on SO cummins is a no-no correct? 

Edited by woodtrucker
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You can install either pump on either engine, but the timing and pressures are different which can affect performance.  That said, the SO is the better of the two.

And check that missing bolt hole.....  Not all of them are all the way through. :thumbup2:

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You guys are awesome. Thanks for all the feedback! Enjoy this forum emensely and I've learned a lot already! 

First thing I did was slow run a small screwdriver down that hole to see if it went thru and yes it does. It was a location where and injector clamp was located. 

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