Hey SmithvilleD could you elaborate on your cold start mods for a 17/18-1 comp
motor? As I'm thinking of going this way, but it does get cold here -15 last week.
I can only comment from experience on my engine, which should be right around 19:1. chevydiesel has said there's a significant difference btwn 18:1 & 19:1, & I believe him to know this from experience.
First, it's good to understand the somewhat unique challenge IDI diesels face in cold weather starting. Diesels are compression ignition. The air in the cylinder must get hot enough upon compression to ignite the diesel. When the engine's all warmed up-n-toasty, all the cast iron around the combustion chamber is warm. When the engine is cold, all that metal is cold. So upon cold cranking, some of the heat built by compression is being absorbed by all the cold metal surrounding the chamber. All diesels face this.
In addition, our 6.5 IDI diesel has a little pre-chamber (spherical space) that's above the cylinder & connected into the cylinder by a little slot. Upon compression, a good bit of the entire cylinder's air charge is compressed up into that pre-chamber. The injector squirts the fuel into this pre-chamber & that's where ignition must start. In essence, the pre-chamber walls are additional metal surface area (that direct inj diesels don't have) that absorbs additional heat (from compression) out of the comb chamber during a cold start.
Lower static compression = less compression heat being built during cranking. As cold start temps get colder, at some point, you approach where glow plug & compression heat just isn't enough to get clean compression ignition & a good start.
I bought what I believe is one of the better battery sets available & easily fit into our trucks. They're the Sears Diehard Platinum P-4, AGM style, 880 CCA, 130 min reserve. Quite expensive at $180 each. But they've soundly beaten the redtop Optima's in Consumer Reports testing for several years now. 4 year free replacement, 100 month pro-rated warranty. They're the same battery sold under the Odyssey name & used in some military apps. I dared spend that much on batteries because I have some friends that have had this type Odyssey battery last 8,9, even 10 years in their hobby cars.
Next, I built 1-0 gauge batt cables utilizing the top-post mount (saves the sidemounts for stereo amps, other power connections). The cables go to a Powermaster starter that really spins a 6.5.
I also run Mobil 1 5w-40 synthetic oil.
This stuff was done to spin the engine as fast as possible during starting. More compression strokes per unit time = putting heat into the chamber at a faster rate. With these batteries, cables, & starter - a recent start at -8 F still spun the engine over quite speedily. In short, this thing really cranks!
I recently put in the Bosch Duraterm glow plugs. They're self regulating & should tolerate the additional glow time I do manually, before turning the key & letting the PCM do it's WTS glow cycle.
As said before, all this allows it to start pretty well, w/o undue hassles. I'd still emphasize, this engine isn't going to be very tolerant of bad glow plugs, etc. Had 1 plug/connection go bad before the Duraterm's. First time it was started at ~ 10-15 F w/ the bad plug, it fired up fine - but the cylinder w/o glow took prolly 5-10 seconds to begin firing cleaning. Put on a bit of a smoke show in those 5-10 seconds. Besides not being optimal, it also makes one feel pretty conspicuous setting in a truck running roughly spitting smoke.