It's the COLDEST Day Of the Year in Colorado: Will My Ram Cummins Diesel Start?
Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары
( www.allTFL.com ) Check out our new spot to find ALL our TFLstudios content, from news to videos and our podcasts! It's -4F, the COLDEST Day Of the Year: Will My Ram Cummins diesel even start?
( / tflcar ) Visit our Patreon page to support the TFL team!
Watch more videos from TFL Studios:
The Fast Lane Truck ( / tfltruck )
The Fast Lane Car ( / tflcar )
TFLoffroad ( / tfloffroad )
TFLbike ( / @tflbike )
TFLnow ( / tflnow )
TFLclassics ( / tflclassics )
TFLtalk ( / tfltalk )
TFL Podcasts:
TFL Talkin' Cars Podcast ( tflcar.libsyn.com/ )
TFL Talkin' Trucks Podcast ( tfltruck.libsyn.com/ )
#cummins #coldstart #diesel
Пікірлер: 859
Everybody knows you’re supposed to rev that engine into the red zone as soon as it starts while the guy outside sprays starting fluid and brake cleaner directly down its throat hole.
@Pesmog
Жыл бұрын
😁
@seymorefact4333
Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣 I use a blow torch to de gel the diesel in the gas tank and warm up the engine.
@God-yi9bd
Жыл бұрын
@@seymorefact4333 they sell anti gel for it 😆
@thef1sh17
Жыл бұрын
mint
@Tonyx.yt.
Жыл бұрын
As a wise man from northern Alberta teached me, hitting rev limiter on a solid freeze engine is the quickest way to warm it up
In case no one has mentioned, the rapid clicking or buzzing heard for a few moments after the start was the oil filter by-pass opening and closing. Once the cold thickened oil overcomes the filter media resistance the noise stops.
@hellkitty1014
Жыл бұрын
You are correct. Even ISX 15 Cummins does that in bone cold temps.
@aslkdfjhg
Жыл бұрын
Wow that's interesting, I thought it was only there as a redundancy in case of excessively thick sludgy oil.
@elonmust7470
Жыл бұрын
@@aslkdfjhg excessively sludgy oil? ROFL
@skookapalooza2016
Жыл бұрын
That's really good to know. Thank you.
@1970brewcrew
Жыл бұрын
Why did you turn on the exhaust brake?
This is the perfect weather for Tommy to review the cold weather capabilities of one of your electric vehicles.
@loganhyler9588
Жыл бұрын
@Andrew they already did multiple videos of the hummer in the cold starting up and driving. It did just fine.
@loganhyler9588
Жыл бұрын
@Andrew and diesels struggle the same way in that regard, as he said in the video. Old diesels and cold weather do not match, the only viable option for extreme cold is gas right now.
@futurevikingtony11
Жыл бұрын
My Mach E had a 90 mile range fully charged in 30 degree weather!!
@brandonm4913
Жыл бұрын
@@futurevikingtony11 ouch. That’s got to be the worst range reduction that I’ve heard of so far.
@wyo_garage20
Жыл бұрын
@@loganhyler9588 A complete fallacy. Diesels don’t struggle any more than anything else does when it’s super cold. -30 last week and I just then had my first gel up and I’ve been driving nothing but my two Cummins trucks since 2002.
You do not have to select high idle or turn on the exhaust brake, the truck will do everything itself. At 170°F the exhaust brake will come off and at 180°F the idle will go to normal unless of course you hit the brake first.
@rollingacresfarmstead206
Жыл бұрын
Exacly you could see the rpms come up without him doing anything
@REWYRED
Жыл бұрын
@@rollingacresfarmstead206 Yes! I usually leave mine plugged in and if the engine is not stone cold it will idle at low RPM for a minute then step up.... If its stupid cold it will fire up then go to fast idle almost immediately, grid heater will be on steady for a bit as well
@clpadel8692
Жыл бұрын
My exhaust brake only activates with the button. My high idle is automatic. 17 2500 Laramie.
@yohnny8839
10 ай бұрын
@clpadel8692 that's weird. My 2016 does it.
We’ve been -40 to -60 here in Interior Alaska for the past 5 days. That is ambient temps, not windchill. Windchill is irrelevant to vehicles it only applies to people. I would love to be at -3F but I realize its all relative , if you’re use to 30-50F above then -3F is a shock to the system. Cheers from North Pole, Alaska! 🎅🏻🎄☃️🇺🇸
@lj2757
Жыл бұрын
How does your vehicle run ? If you have one
@brentbeiler7051
Жыл бұрын
Grew up in northpole on newby rd, In wasilla now, best place to grow up! Miss it, rippen the 200x or the bravo to moose creek.
@shaun.h.barlow
Жыл бұрын
@@lj2757 120 volt ac block heater and oil pan heater has to be turned on at least 2-3 hrs before you even try to start it
@landon6327
Жыл бұрын
Mid -30’s here in northern Saskatchewan the past few weeks
@brentbeiler7051
Жыл бұрын
@@landon6327 stoke the wood stove eh.
The real question this morning is “What’s the range of your Hummer?”
@zachlafond2652
Жыл бұрын
This. They'll probably hide it until its 50F again.
@stxrmcrow9575
Жыл бұрын
20 milies take it or leave it
@bpicard2786
Жыл бұрын
Better than an EV
You should head up to Alberta Canada right now. My sister sent me a snapshot of their weather yesterday, and it was -41 Celsius without the wind chill , that's -41.8 Fahrenheit. Try a cold start in that!
@MattSmith-vl8zp
Жыл бұрын
That’s what block heaters are for
@MattSmith-vl8zp
Жыл бұрын
Also these guys don’t even have the winter cover on…
@geoffrust6787
Жыл бұрын
@@MattSmith-vl8zp From Edmonton, Alberta. Yesterday I zipped my coat up, felt like an admission of failure.
@GlenGoesOutdoors
Жыл бұрын
... am in Alberta. My area had -44C (-47F) with -55C (-67F) wind chill. So I kinda laughed when they showed the -3 Thermometer, LOL. Many of us start our trucks in that weather without using our block heaters. For my Tundra in this weather I run a 900CCA battery with 0W30 synthetic oil. Diesel engines need a little more love than gas, but if you run a 5w40 synthetic in your diesel with amazing battery power, you can still start fine. Plugging in the block heater is best, if you have that option.
@evictioncarpentry2628
Жыл бұрын
Dear Genius, the windchill is a made up mathematical number and does not affect the ambient temperature. If its -20 with -100 windchill....its still only -20 and nothing can get colder then that. Thanks.
It’s amazing how quick that thing actually warmed up my old 7.3 wouldn’t even think about heat until a good 10-15 minutes down the road
@timcartwright4679
Жыл бұрын
Yep, we had to beat the snot out of ours to get any heat.
@DeltaSierra426
Жыл бұрын
You didn't use a grill cover I take it?
Andre barely phased, ice water runs through his veins!
I worked in Newport VT many years ago. I had my 2000 Ford 7.3 diesel. It was -24F all day long. She started up rough but started. Treating the diesel fuel for those temps is vital. The T444 IH was designed as a cold weather medium duty engine. Miss her.
Where -3 in Tennessee this morning! Brrr! Got wood stove going watching tfl!
It warmed up here to -8 and it was pretty nice. When it gets cold outside you can always look forward to warmer temperatures like this.
I’m in CO. @8000ft. My 17 Ram always starts, but when it’s really cold I cycle the intake heater twice. Much happier starting!!
I might be mistaken but the truck goes into high idle when started in cold weather. My 21 Cummins takes about a minute or so after it starts to automatically go into high idle. Not sure it’s a good idea to force it into high idle right after you start it when it’s that cold out but man, it’s really cold out there. In NJ it’s 50deg going down to about 20 by 5pm.
@caseypries7559
Жыл бұрын
I agree. My 2019 goes into high idle mode with the exhaust brake engaged automatically after a few minutes. I think it's allowing some time to get the oil warmed ever so slightly before it revs up.
@CrackkkCrazyyy
Жыл бұрын
Sounds balmy! -37 here in SW MT. -51 with Windchill
@vincentlombardo8991
Жыл бұрын
Also in NJ, we’ll be out salting roads later this afternoon. Tomorrow morning our temps will be around the temps in this video
@markball7028
Жыл бұрын
@@caseypries7559 my old 2004 Ram Cummins goes into high idle as well when it cold. It also surges the idle for a few minutes then levels out the idle. It only does that it cold weather. Around the freezing mark and below. It starts pretty good in cold weather.
@caseypries7559
Жыл бұрын
@@vincentlombardo8991 here in Indiana it's -9F right now with wind chill around -35F so it's just lovely out. Great day to stay in the house.
I live in northern Finland Hand cranked my Lada in -47c weather And it started with no problem and worked with no problem
@Welcometofacsistube
Жыл бұрын
I live in Saskatchewan at -47 c and my chrysler starts no problem
@garys2157
Жыл бұрын
@@Welcometofacsistube Wow pretty good especially it being a chrysler, not a premium vehicle like a lada.
@Welcometofacsistube
Жыл бұрын
@@garys2157 did your bicycle start? Or did your mom drive you today?
@Mariini
Жыл бұрын
😄
@garys2157
Жыл бұрын
@Hal 1000 I wasn't the one with the childish brag about their vehicle, anyways it would be silly to leave my battery in my electric bike if I am not using it at winter, and no problem starting my 2022 Lariat F150. You probably missed the original joke to about it being a Lada.
Merry Christmas TFL!
The CO temperature is making me appreciate FL right now.
@Tonyx.yt.
Жыл бұрын
FL summer makes you appreciate CO summer btw
@JimmyCasket02
Жыл бұрын
It’s -15 in northern Minnesota right now that should make you appreciate FL even more
@nachoandsancho5218
Жыл бұрын
@working_country ___ 66 today in phx...low 70's next few. Even Flag is in 50's but they suppose to be colder
having all these gauges and numbers are great but it leads to a lot of anxiety. Old trucks some years ago went through cold climates too but nobody knew about the "real" temp numbers of transmission fluids etc. And they still worked.
@georgethegshep7344
Жыл бұрын
I assume your very old lol. Overheating is usually the culprit of when things break so being able to monitor many temps at once is useful and necessary
Where I am in Canada right now we've had like like 3 or 4 straight days of -25*Celsius, which is like -13* Fahrenheit. It's so cold in British Columbia that even the rainforests on the coast have dry powder snow right now.
@alflyer9406
Жыл бұрын
Alberta yesterday morning: -37C = -35F Nice and toasty today at -25C = -13F
@240sxking5
Жыл бұрын
@@alflyer9406 I’m right here with ya bud, warm days are ahead! Lol
@JeepCherokeeful
Жыл бұрын
Canada who?
@freeaudiobooks7469
Жыл бұрын
@@JeepCherokeeful it's now chinada
@Ogdin3
Жыл бұрын
@@freeaudiobooks7469 we prefer Canadistan.
You guys don't know what cool is I live in northern BC I didn't plug my truck in it it started at -38 my 59 it took two tries it started
@tosijjaan
Жыл бұрын
And this video was filmed at like -22 And they thought it was super cold 🤣🤣
@Welcometofacsistube
Жыл бұрын
I'm in saskatoon and it's-47c right now. -22c is t shirt weather
It was -5 degrees F this morning in Louisville, KY...coldest it's been in about 25 years. I've got a 2000 4Runner and once I got the frozen door pried open, it started right up. I let it fully warm up before moving, and the steering was stiff, and the automatic transmission held 2nd gear for a long time before shifting, but it was drama free. The windows are still frozen shut, (it rained all day yesterday before turning into snow). There is a layer of ice on the roads with packed snow on top of it. I have Falken Wildpeak AT3w's and they were excellent...really didn't need 4wd, but shifted into it for going up hills. Stay warm!
The active grill shutters really help the warmup on these new diesels .
From Canada this video made me laugh. Every car makes funny noises in winter but once its 10-15 years old ,Then you find out real quality.
@jeffsikula2920
Жыл бұрын
Funny you say that...Ive always thought that too. The cold points out short- comings of ones vehicle.
@zackatron925
Жыл бұрын
Funny most cars now can’t make it 8 years… it’s sad they fall apart at the seams especially in the extremes
@AKJeeper
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely true. The blower motor on my Jeep used to squeal like crazy at -40. Blew out a set of Monroe shock absorbers on my old Dakota hitting a frost heave at -45. Radial tires would start developing flat spots in them at those temps. I chalk it all up to the fun of living in Interior Alaska in the winter. :)
My diesel cold startup experience with this storm as follows: Truck 2002 Ford f250 7.3 Batteries Aldelco AGM Golds, 6 years old. Coolant/D.water 60/40 Oil Shell Rotella T6 5w40 Odometer 175,000 miles Motorcraft glow plugs, 2 years old. Block heater, Hotshots winter fuel additive. Startup 1 with Block heater. Temperature: -8, -45 with wind chill. Block heater for 3 hours. Truck started right up with 1 cycle of the glow plugs. After 10 seconds Truck went into high idle. No smoke after 2 seconds. No engine lag. Near perfect startup. Startup 2 without Block heater. Temperature: -3 -40 with windchill. 1 cycle of the glow plugs also. Truck started right up again but this time after startup it lagged to idle engine speed. 10 seconds later went into high idle and after 20 minutes resumed normal idle. Blew white smoke. Leaked no oil due to brand new oil cooler seals. And maintained 14.6v during idle. Overall old trucks do fine if they're maintained well and proper assistance measures are utilized.
I've had my 21 ram since March. This is the first really cold day I've started it -2 f. I was surprised how easily it did start not being plugged in. Mine went straight to high idle when in started.
I cold started my 05 PowerSmoke this AM, but I was a balmy +4. Took her a few seconds of rolling over before she sputtered to life. I came back outside after about 20 mins with the high idle set and she was toasty!
Started my BMW 220d Grand tourer in -11F with no problem last week, in Sweden..
That was a real good start. on my 2000 Ram 2500, i had a engine heater i would plug in when it was cold. one year i was upstate NY and temp hit about zero and it started fine. however, as i went down the road, performance got sluggish and wouldn't go above 30. The fuel had jelled and hadn't been treated at the station i got it from. i had to stop and get some diesel thinner/heat and put in the tank. after a little while were going down the road ok. during this cold snap, it got down to 2 degrees and my 2022 1500 Echo-diesel started fine, no issues.
I also now have a 2500 Cummins 2021. And mine started well too here in the Denver metro area, but the heat cycle was only like 20 seconds at most! Interesting to see yours was longer!
@freeaudiobooks7469
Жыл бұрын
Grid heater bolt drops in ur engine and it blows. Mopar junk. Need banks bypass and def delete cause that freezes too. Airbox gets full of snow. Pure utter garbage. Never mopar again
@waynehicks317
Жыл бұрын
@@freeaudiobooks7469 can't delete in my county otherwise I would. I test drove Cummins prototypes. They are far from junk.
@toddbob55
Жыл бұрын
its a chrysler it won't last anyway
@unconventionalideas5683
Жыл бұрын
@@waynehicks317 Deleting actually is terrible for the driver's health. Studies show that exhaust emissions are worse inside the cabin than outside directly behind the tailpipe, which is pretty hard to believe at first but it is actually a very repeatable finding. The backseat is typically worse off. Suffice to see, unless you think smoking is a good idea, you should really refrain from deleting the emissions equipment.
@waynehicks317
Жыл бұрын
@@unconventionalideas5683 I mean with my current local laws, I can't anyways. But is that because some people who delete also want to roll coal? Because my truck would definitely be tuned to where it would not be.
Andre I wish you guys would include how well the heated seats and steering wheel work in some of these videos. I think people would enjoy seeing small things like that.
@jayamoroso5870
Жыл бұрын
I have a 2021 3500 longhorn limited and I can tell you the seats/ steering wheel gets hot pretty quick. It was 14 degrees Fahrenheit last night and within ten minutes of driving, I shut seat/ steering wheel heaters off. They almost get too hot.
@brandonm4913
Жыл бұрын
2021 Laramie 2500 Cummins. The heated seats and wheel work really well. The wheel gets hot quickly and I usually don’t leave it on very long. The heated seats get toasty quickly too. I find that once I’m warm I usually switch them to low or they get too hot.
Gotta love when it sounds like a fan is impacting something on a cold day.
Cummins has done a great job on the grid heater on the intake. They work really well up here in Canada at temps cooler than that all winter long 🛻
@elmoremundell9450
Жыл бұрын
Yep .. just watch out for the nut falling off of the grid heater inside the engine. Many videos out there of catastrophic engine failure because of the dumb grid heater nut falling off. I just blew a bunch of cash on a Banks intake and replacement grid heater as insurance to never have that happen to me. Merry Christmas!
Just got a 22 I am amazed at how fast the cummins warms up now vs my 2016. With in 5 mins of idling and coolant was over 90 degrees in negative temps and holds it well. Fully warmed up with in minutes of driving. My 2016 wouldn't be fully warmed till the a bit of freeway driving. It warms up faster than my 2016 civic!
Turns on truck. .5 seconds later: “wow, this is a pretty long warm up cycle”
Andre and Alex, my new fav TFL duo.
I started a 2021 Ram 6.7 cummins in Virginia MN during a cold front. The truck was unplugged overnight, with temperature at -30F. Fired right up.
Started my 22 ram today, -16 ambient-57 wind chill. Started no problem
I owned a 99 and 03 Cummins Dodge 5.9 Both started without a block heater at -19 below zero with no problems what so ever. They ran flawlessly! The power steering did whine for about 10 miles on the 99. The heater output took a while to get warm though. When I did use the block heater it gave me instant heat.
Such a beautiful truck
I had a 95 Toyota pickup in N MN about 15yrs ago and the actual temp was -37 and she fired up but holy crap trying to row through the gears was extremely hard. Was like the gear shift was going through wet sand
Although I live in New Orleans and will likely never experience temperatures as low as this, this was a very informative and entertaining video.
Here in Wisconsin it's around -10 Fahrenheit with close to -30-35 wind chill today. My 19 Cummins is sitting outside at work all day. We shall see how it fires up tonight when I leave.
I had a 2006 Duramax 2500, never had a problem with cold starts, never used the grill cover, but I did use an anti-gel additive once temperatures dropped under 20' and yes, the fuel filter change would be a good idea. I changed mine every 15- 20,000 miles. Or once a year. Now I average 30,000 miles a year.
Just came from minus 38 in Yellowstone with wind chill at minus 45 and 8 inches of fresh snow. Hemi started without issue.
Ah so many pleasant memories. One morning back in the 80's I was too late to wait for multiple busses so I jumped in my old Buick on a morning like this, fired it up, scraped the windshield as best I could inside and out, ploughed through frozen piled up snow with that GM posi, made it to the undeground parking lot at work and grabbed the elevator to the office in time. One hitch though. The car had busted hoses and absolutely no water when I fired it up. I took a chance and let me tell you that old 455 was toasty by the time I shut it off. Winter trips at 7 am to work at bone cracking temperatures are par for the course in Ontario and some of my fondest memories. Not!
@montanamountainutv
Жыл бұрын
That's awesome!
Started my 2020 6.7 H.O. this morning here in northern NH(-13). Didn't plug it in and it fired right up. But just remember the Cummins will automatically go into high-idle in these conditions. Also remember the computer remembers the last engine cycle and of you haven't driven the Ram in a while, the pre-start cycle will be longer.
I brought a 2001 Florida MDX on a trip to Canada back in 2004 and it experienced -40C/F cold start. I drove 200 miles that day and it never warmed up... The only thing that kept me warm was the seat warmers. That was the last time I drove my vehicles to Canada in winter.
wow this would be a great day to see how well the propane fire place heat up the camper, i am thinking about putting that model of heater in my cargo trailer conversion.
I live in Georgia about an hour from ATL. Good video got me to thinking about a couple of things.
Would really like to see some Hummer EV testing in this cold weather (as others have indicated). Especially, leaving it outside over night without it plugged in.
@drockjr
Жыл бұрын
And go straight to towing. What do you want to bet....40 miles on a full charge? 25?
@PonyFoot123
Жыл бұрын
@@drockjr that means it works as planned.
@rollingacresfarmstead206
Жыл бұрын
Hush! Dont asks important questions like that!
You do not need to select high idle when it is cold. It will do it for you. It is also recommended by your manual to turn the exhaust brake on for warm up.
I have a 2017 GMC diesel. I plugged in the block heater last night for the first time. I'm in Texas. 12 degrees this morning. I interested in the cold start this morning.
Was 7 when I started mine up yesterday and ran perfect started immediately
Scotland last week was -18'.My 12 month old Defender d300 started 1st time and i didn't rev the arse out of a cold engine!!!!
3 degrees in Tenn this am. My snow covered Xterra pro 4x cranked like a champ! ✊
My 6.0 Powerstroke started well in the cold today. It got to -8 here as well. It is not happy driving for a while unless it either was plugged in or is given a little while to warm up.
Modern diesels has gotten so good at starting in cold weather. I drive a 2012 Audi A6 V6 TDI, and last year i cold started it in about -25 celsius. It only ran the glow plugs for about 3 seconds and raised idle for maybe 30 seconds. Otherwise all was as usual. Thats pretty good for a 10+ year old car with 150000 km.
Andre, would putting the transfer case in neutral with the transmission in drive help warm it up a little quicker? I use to do that with my manual transmission trucks (don't forget to set the parking brake!) because when it's in neutral, the fluid just sits at the bottom starving the bearings/ internals of oil. Not sure if it would help with an automatic though.
How cute, in high school I had to plug in the block heater 30 minutes before I had to leave for school then go sit in my Scout for 2-3 minutes holding down the glow plug button to even give it a fighting chance of starting in the winter. Once it finally did bark off I had to hold the gas pedal down for another minute or so since the high idle didn't work until it could stay running on it's own while I made a huge cloud of diesel smoke for the neighbors to enjoy. Those old Nissan SD-33T mechanical diesels are a different breed.
I know I take it easy on my 8 speed transmission in my Ram 1500 when it's cold out. It definitely holds a gear longer and shifts slower until it warms up.
It’s going to be in the 80s here in Los Angeles this weekend… you guys should make a drive to warm up lol… happy holidays!!!
I have a 2020 6.6L Duramax in my GMC 2500. I'm living in the Northwest Territories. I have had no issues starting in our cold temps. We've had our day time highs in around -35C and as low as -40C over the last week. I do make use of my block heater. I also added 2x battery blankets and an oil pan heater just to increase my chances of starting. I have done a few cold starts at -33C without plugging in and had no issues. The only irritating part is the DEF tank takes a few min to warm up enough to melt the fluid but knock on wood - no issues with the DEF system as of yet. I keep the tank just slightly below 1/2 for the DEF and that seems to prevent any issues.
-37C here in Saskatchewan Canada(-31F) my truck is sitting plugged in at work for a few days… will be interesting to see how it starts… 2022 Ram 1500 Rebel with the Hemi
@Welcometofacsistube
Жыл бұрын
I'm in saskatoon. -47c with the wind chill
@Tonyx.yt.
Жыл бұрын
@@Welcometofacsistube windchill didnt affect equipment but just living creatures btw
@Welcometofacsistube
Жыл бұрын
@@Tonyx.yt. another one who know nothing about the cold. Windchill does affect equipment. Big time.
@Tonyx.yt.
Жыл бұрын
@@Welcometofacsistube It does as far as equipment is warm, that's right. But once the object reach the ambient temperature, there's no heat to lose quickly due to windchill. Wind increase heat loss, that's for sure, but you cant lose heat if there's no heat to lose anymore.
I started my Cummins at -20 before. Used the block heater to increase longevity
Hi guys, Don't have to be worry about minus 3 or 5 °F. Those trucks used to start and run at this temp. May be it is one of a few times that you got a lot of snow and cold but be assured that there a lot of place where those engine run at a low degrees. And they do wery well. It's not a surprise for me.
WOW! That is interesting and nice to know.
It’s 11 degrees Fahrenheit in Dallas, my 2006 F-250 took a bit longer of cranking, but it started ok
I live in Vermont and we deal with the same type of weather normally.
Where I'm sitting in MN it's -11.....without the windchill.....and was below zero pretty much all day yesterday for the high....had to start a Chevy Volt and a Honda Odyssey and didn't have any issues.
I start my truck on -40 not being plugged all the time during winter lol
My 2004 sitting for 2 weeks started right up no hesitation 9 degrees
I've started mine in -40c. It started just fine. It was the heater fan and the power steering pump that made noise
Moved from WY to AZ last year don't miss that at all. Miss my deer antelope and elk but not the wind or the freeze.
My Tundra started up with a little effort up in NW Montana yesterday when it was -30 I keep my truck outside year round with no block heater, only issue was the whine of the steering pump and the heaviness of the steering wheel.
I'm in North Dakota right now... -26f.. Everyone has a plug in hybrid here... They all have block heaters...lol
I am from northeast Wyoming. The week before Christmas we were well below zero for several days. I own a 2012 Ram 2500 diesel. It started at -22 (not plugged in)and I used it throughout the day. Hot Shots Secret anti-gel and number 2 diesel.
Lol. That’s a nice winter day in our part of Canada. Try -42 degrees or minus >-50 with wind.
-8 that's cute, -44 this morning in Northern Canada, without a wind.
We have a 2022 Rebel Ecodiesel. It's -31f here today. With windchill feels like -52f. She remote started great. But everything feels super stiff when you drive.
Started my hemi in -13 last night! Went down to -22 the night before
When Andre was taking after start it was very hard to hear what he said! Other than that great video!!
My 7.3 with 298,000 miles started up just fine without plugging it in when I was in -9 weather in Utah. But then again ,I believe in maintenance and fixing stuff that isn’t working right.
I'd love to see a comparison on how it starts with the block heater plugged in or not
I think the coldest I've had to start my '03 3500 Ram Cummins was -22 and it had been setting out all night while I was at work, not plugged in and it took right off after the second try. My 2020 2500 Cummins had no problem at -15 unplugged overnight this last winter. I've never had to use ether for starting on any ram cummins.
I love watching this channel. Andre be so dramatic lol. 😂
It has its own cabin heating protocol. You don't need to idle it up, it does it automatically and will also run the exhaust brake against itself while it does this.
What a breeze! We were at -34 when I went to work Thursday a.m.! Wind chill was -50ish. 🥶🙏☘️. P.S. I live in Casper.
Great video, the grid heater is actually for the emission system to reduce soot load. I have a LML Duramax in my GMC and to reduce emissions and better fuel economy it lives in my garage. It is plugged in 2 hrs before start up with a block heater, oil pan heater and transmission pan heater. I prefer to baby my truck to reduce wear and tear. It is extremely rare that my glow plugs come on.
@NotAFingBootlicker
Жыл бұрын
Nice truck brother, it’s a real shame more ppl don’t take pride and maintain their vehicles. I’ve got an 03 suburban 2500 with 340k miles and 8000 hrs on her but she still runs strong. Every 5k mile fuel filter and oil change, 50k on trans, diffs, transfer case, brakes, coolant and power steering. One day I’d like to throw in an LBZ tho, one day
@chrisbarnes2823
Жыл бұрын
@@NotAFingBootlicker yes I agree we need to look after our trucks. I run 5W-40 full synthetic oil and change it twice a year because I pull a fifth wheel trailer. Brakes are checked twice a year when the winter wheels come off then go on. My son has a 1 ton GMC, same thing happens to that.
@MrCherrygrovedude
Жыл бұрын
The grid heater on a Cummins is not for emissions. They don't have glow plugs so that's the only way to warm the air. A duramax has glow plugs and they come on every time you start it.
@chrisbarnes2823
Жыл бұрын
@@MrCherrygrovedude I didn’t realize the Cummins is sans glow plugs. I have a diesel in my 109 LandRover which is glowplug with ether pump start, 1969 vintage
@MrCherrygrovedude
Жыл бұрын
@@chrisbarnes2823 no glow plugs and being an inline 6 is the reason for it's legendary reliability and simplicity. Cummins is the best engine you can get in a light duty pickup.
At Malmstrom AFB Montana in the mid-80s, I often drove GM diesels in the missile field. We had to leave them running 3 days straight in the winter or they wouldn’t start. Things have come a long way.
I'm just north of you guys and it was like -20 as well, -52 with wind chill, my 2.7 ecoboost f150 fired right up thankfully haha
-30celsius here yesterday. (-22) 2.8l duramax took only 2seconds to warm up the glow plugs.
Were you using any fuel additives/anti gel?
You can have those Colorado temps. And the diesel truck!
Should have a block heater. I put one in my Ford Fusion because we get 20+ days below 0F here and i like to let the block heater pre warm it for 2 to 3 hours..makes starting it far easier...probably better for the engine.
For some reason I thought it would have gotten that cold more often in CO. Interesting!
My 94 Cummins had No Problem, I plugged it in every night it sat outside and I wasn’t a Mile High either. But it was a 3500 Single Cab Small Wrecker with a 24” frame extension for a tunnel box behind the Cab. The weather in the City of Brotherly Love can get just as Bad as Fairbanks!! Plug the Truck In.
@markball7028
Жыл бұрын
I’d say he didn’t put anti gel in the fuel. That’s why he is having issues. It’s -7 F here in Missouri this morning. My 2004 Cummins started up fine.
@bigmountain7561
Жыл бұрын
@@markball7028 It’s amazing that you live a mile up and don’t plug in or use anti gel in your fuel. My truck was the smallest in a fleet of 10 wreckers. Most were 50 ton and above. I was really anal on my truck and made sure that it wouldn’t fail when I was on a call. Standard Shift and 4x4 made it awesome.
Happy to know Cummins is doing well. Although I work for the High Horsepower Division (19L+)
We couldn’t get the semis started yesterday. We needed the block heaters for sure
I have the same air pressure readings on mine now.
It's been minus 35 F all week up here in Alberta Canada and I work for a large fleet. Everything breaks at this temperature. Been boosting and fixing hydraulic leaks all week up here. Good Times.🙂🥶
@edwardhoward4708
Жыл бұрын
I knew a guy who worked on the oil pipeline in Alaska in winter. He said they never turned off their trucks except inside the shop. Do you leave the rucks running when outside?
@evictioncarpentry2628
Жыл бұрын
@@edwardhoward4708 Yep. That's why when my friends find a "deal" on low mile trucks for Alberta I tell them to pass. A truck could have 30k miles but it's been idling 24/7 for years lol
@semlohde1
Жыл бұрын
I just can not imagine working in those temps.
@thatdudeca
Жыл бұрын
@@edwardhoward4708 yes all vehicles stay running, especially the heavy machinery.
@shanerajotte
Жыл бұрын
@@edwardhoward4708 Depends on who you work for. Some companies do that. Where i work everything has a good block heater and we will shut them down overnight. If the battery is good they usually start in the morning. The engine oils now a days are pretty good in the cold.