tjkj2002 wrote:
Yeah putting those winter fronts on will help in lower temps but you would not want to run them with the temps above 60 degrees.Also remember that the CRD's have a alloy head and heating up the engine past 190 while running hard or towing will also increase your EGT's and could play havok with the alloy head.Detroits/Cummins is mainly what I work on,I love those 8V92TA's,they are some powerhouses!
Well, I use the term "Series 92 Roulette" when it comes to bus engines. They make a lot of power, just don't stand too close to that 8V92 when it decides to grenade. Had an empty bank account and garage full of scrap iron to prove it.
Interesting that a Series 92 maintains engine temps better than most 4-cycle. In a bus application, 6V92 or 8V92 DDEC uses 190* thermostats and the radiator shutters open at 195*. In cold weather, I prefer a Series 92 because it can throw enough extra heat to keep the coach warm without using auxillary heaters. Now, just finding a way to keep the rods in the block.....
Just a gut feeling DCX is having a difficult time balancing low combustion temps for NOx emissions and high enough EGT's to burn off the oils & soot. They are running it at less than optimum burn temps to control NOx and thus not getting use of all the power in the fuel. That is why fuel economy drops so badly at the hint of cold weather. Kill the EGR and get combutions temps up and you can easily see mpg's in the 30+ range from this engine in a Jeep.