Turbo Tim wrote:
Yes I have the tow package and the aux “Electric” fan in front of the radiator.
Yes I was hammering it but also noted that the temp gauge was pinned on the hot side.
I know that there was some talk about the calibration of the gauge but I also noted that it will stay in the middle a long time before it goes up. When it does go up, it goes fast.
This is why I question the calibration as temperatures don’t move that fast from normal.
This summer I will be monitoring many things with my AE laptop setup now that the SEGR is up and running also…
It would be interesting to see what happens this time with the SEGR installed and the heat load from the EGR system eliminated. Not only is that reducing direct load on the cooling system via the EGR cooler, but significantly reduced air intake (and exhaust) temps in the end are helping reduce cooling system load as well.
With the ORM/SEGR in cold weather we have a cooling system that is significantly oversized requiring the use of grille blockers/blankets, yet evidence from last summer suggests that for towing in hot weather with A/C operating we're taxing the upper limits of the system.
One thing to remember for towing with A/C use - the same combination cooler is used for both A/C and tranny fluid. Adding an aux tranny cooler can significantly reduce the amount of heat (and temp of the air) being pulled back thru the intercooler and radiator. It has the added benefit of improving both tranny operation (lower fluid temp) and A/C cooling capacity - more of the capacity of that combo cooler is available for A/C use.
The amount of heat added by an EGR system is not insignificant. On the newer model cab over OTR trucks, to meet '07 emissions for U.S. use, they weren't able to increase the size of the radiator due to the design of the truck. They had to redesign the cooling system and add an auxiliary radiator, almost the size of what's in our CRD's, to be able to handle the additional heat load. Since I started working there in '97, I've seen the size of the radiators more than double to handle the additional heat load from progressively increased use of EGR as new emissions requirements took effect.