ak diesel driver
6.5 driver
and hurry up we're waiting
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Here is where my "81" 6.2 came from http://www.thetruckstop.us/forum/showthread.php?18716-I-must-have-been-good-no-coal I haven't used the engine yet. It is packed away in a hard to get to place. I'll see about getting it out.
Easiest way is to hit a counterweight with a ball peen hammer.
http://www.carcraft.com/techarticles/116_0308_crankshafts_how_to/index1.html
BTW, billit is stronger than forged. But WAY more $
Good stuff there. The section on crank life has me concerned. Cast crank, plus weak engine case casting material, has me really concerned that I won't see my planned 300K miles out of my '99:
Crank Life Cycle
It may seem as though a crank that passes a Magnaflux test for cracks and has had its journals reground is as good as new, but this isn't necessarily so. All metals have finite fatigue life, which basically means a crank can be loaded and unloaded a certain number of times until it breaks. How many cycles the part lasts until failure is directly related to the amount of stress or load it is under, even if that is much lower than the ultimate tensile strength of the material.
Fatigue life can be nearly indefinite if the load cycles are below a critical level, referred to as the endurance limit. What this means to us is that a thirty-year-old crank with an unknown history is a gamble in a high-performance application. If it's a steel 440 Mopar crank out of grandpa's Chrysler Newport, for instance, it may have never seen cycle loads to measurably diminish its fatigue life. On the other hand, it could have been out of cousin Bubba's nitrous'd mud-bog truck and already fatigued to the edge of failure. It's not like we're telling you something you don't already know here; if a part has already had the heck beaten out of it, chances are it's probably about to break.
As material strength increases, so generally does fatigue life and the part's endurance limit. Higher-quality cranks will last longer and take more abuse before failure--again, a no-brainer, but backed by metallurgical science. Fatigue failure generally begins to appear as minute surface cracks, which develop into fractures under repeated or fluctuating stresses. Processes such as nitriding or shot-peening put the outside surface of the metal into a compressed load, improving the surface strength and increasing fatigue life. If the engine is being built for serious horsepower or high rpm, or for use with nitrous, blowers, or in endurance racing, you may want to think seriously about crank selection. A stock cast crank may survive some heroic numbers for a few pulls on the dyno, but over the long haul, the economy of that choice may prove to be foolish savings.
All of which means that bumping fuel up and the boost up to say 14 psi means shorter life.:rolleyes5:
I wonder if any of the early 6.2s had a forged crank? and how one would tell?
Yes it is but some times you use what you have or can get. There will be many more military optimisers in the future. They are barely started swapping out the optimisers for the P400sBarry...woundn't that be about like putting lipstick on a pig :???: :hihi:
Yes it is but some times you use what you have or can get. There will be many more military optimisers in the future. They are barely started swapping out the optimisers for the P400s
Yea, like you don't have one hiding somewhere.....Waiting for a 3500HD 4X4 Crew Cab.:hihi:
I saw an ad on EBAY the other day just browsing it was for a 6.5 powered rollback wrecker that came with 2 additional 6.5 powered trucks for spare parts and I instantly thought of Bk95td. And that would almost be unfair marketing for him. The owner/seller must know the 6.5 market and is trying to sucker one of us with too sweet of a deal to refuse.
The construction company was only advertizing the 97 and 98 trucks. When the mechanic showed me this one I liked it better than the other 2 trucks. I offered $2000 less than what they were asking for them. They called me back the next day trying to get a counter offer. I stood solid on what I offered. I really wanted the truck they didn't want to sell. A 99 k3500 flatbed with plow . Less than 80,000 miles. They wouldn't sell it though.