Joe Romas wrote:
Roostre wrote:
Anyone else wondering if the root cause of the turbo failures we are seeing is possibly due to the oil spec mix-up?
It seems reasonable that oils not designed for turbo duty would 'coke' the bearings due to being less tolerant of high heat at the turbo, thus causing this rash of turbo problems??
Yes we need to use the proper oil for our turbo charged diesel engines. But you also need to heed the cool down times for the turbo. If you take the number of hours calculated above for cool down and compare that to the cost of a turbo replacement then you can make the decision to follow the procedure or not.
Two turbo failures come to mind. Jimstall's, I'm willing to bet his had the correct oil. But his normal driving in Germany was much faster then in the US if I understand correctly.
The first was Gordie's and standing back taking a look at what happened there's two things that stand out to me. One he's not sure what oil and how long it was in there if I understand correctly. Second the temperature was very cold and the engine/turbo was not given much time to warm up driving gently. So the oil pressure from the thick oil was at the extreme max and his turbo seal blew.
Hind sight being 20/20 both the above where total engine failure occured might have been preventable if caught in time.
My

I'm running Mobile 1 synthetic and change the oil every year on both - just because.
I live at the top of a long hill in Washington State - but most of the elevation gain is at 35 mph and the last mile up the drive is at 15 mph - but is steep. I wonder if the turbo is spooling up very high at those speeds or getting particularly hot?
As far as letting it idle, I've read contradictory reports regarding the effect on overall engine health - a damnd if you do damnd if you don't scenario. If I don't let it sit & idle, I could ruin the turbo, if I do, I could ruin the top end:
http://www.greendieselengineering.com/forum/posts/list/111.pageNonetheless, I would really like some hard evidence that I need to let it sit there for 5 minutes and if so, if there is a poor man's way to accomplish cooling without this. (Perhaps by engaging a fan on the way up the driveway? Other?)
With the weather we experience up here on the mountain, as well as the plethora of hills all around us, as well as always being in a hurry with two small children in tow, I honestly have trouble envisioning the logistics of it: Sitting in the driveway or a parking lot with the car idling. Our garage is very small so idling a diesel inside the garage - even with the door open - is a very bad thing.
Do others in this forum actually sit in their cars reading a book or whatever waiting for their CRDs turbo to cool enough to shut them off?