3500GMC
What T F, over
I'd be interested in an electric clutch fan also. That and a 88894035 WP should help a 6.5TD big time.
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None that I know of, Schiker - I was referring to the unbalanced flow doubly affecting the passenger side of the block due to the additional heat of the turbine - noone prolly would have noticed if the reduced flow had been to the cooler driver's side - I'd like to see one of the new service replacement pumps, dissect, analyze and compare it - personally, if I was still into the 6.5, I'd shoot for the electric fan clutch that GM uses on several other models - larger versions are used on Cummins, IH, etc - would allow full control from the 'stat and the driver's seat
I charge the batt's on my truck once a month, prime the fuel line, fire it up to see if the old thrill is still there
I confiscated the old stuff, cleaned it up, and with some mixing of old and new parts, most of the modified '83 front-draft system now resides in my charge-air cooled truck - waiting is the blank turbo-side valve cover, to be installed at some as-yet undisclosed opportunity - we shall see how fares the soggy mess with the '06 CDR configuration if I ever start driving it again - also:
I have also been considering reverting the engine back to the serp belt configuration, having all the associated parts stashed away for posteriority's sake (this would also involve a new very large air-dam front bumper to alleviate engine-bay turbulence created by the Dana60 front-axle)
The '90's CDR system has been in service since ~1986 in several similar forms, but all configured with the tuna can on the turbo-side valve cover, with an internal pre-coalescing screen like a section of 3M pot-scrubber, rubber hose to metal tubing to the compressor housing, short articulated rubber hose to the compressor inlet - not bad until the first time the intake plenum is opened, then whaddamess!! Even worse, if a charge-air cooler has been added, knowing that mess has also taken up residence in that expensive heat exchanger, and no way to clean it, easily - cheer up, folks: relief is at hand, in two forms
Firstly: the early 6.2L CDR system consisted of an oil filler tube with breather port, an internal splash shield covering the timing train, rubber hose connected to the CDR can, with several other hoses\tubes connecting the CDR to either side of the dual-plane intake plenum - ??????? - remember, there were no production line 6.2L turboDiesel engines produced - so what, you ask, with no attempt at disguising your feigned interest - well, a deja vu event occured back around the middle of the new century: all the current 6.5LTD's rolling off the production line have reverted to that original CDR\CCV system, front-mounted, connected to the oil filler tube rather than the valve-cover - guess what: much less oil in the mist exiting that location, far from the turbine snail - remember: hot oil vaporizes easily.
Now, how did I get to this point from tinkering with my truck today? I recently spent much time with a neighbor's very sick '83 6.2L Suburban with over 300kmi on the clock - in the process of timing chainset, seals, IP, injectors, etc, I upgraded the old beastie to the current CDR configuration, as the old parts were unavailable locally - now, being an educated opportunist with some hidden agenda, I confiscated the old stuff, cleaned it up, and with some mixing of old and new parts, most of the modified '83 front-draft system now resides in my charge-air cooled truck - waiting is the blank turbo-side valve cover, to be installed at some as-yet undisclosed opportunity - we shall see how fares the soggy mess with the '06 CDR configuration if I ever start driving it again - also:
Secondly: the Mann Provent CCV filter\scrubber is a cannister that fits between your CDR and the turbo compressor - it absolutely removes 99% of the oily content from the oily crankcase effluent, sends the scrubbed remainder thru the turbo, the oil precipitates back thru the drain and into the crankcase - good news: it is EPA certified, as FoMoCo has authorized dealer-installation on all Diesel vehicles not so-equipped from the factory - I've been running one on my turbocharged and charge-air cooled Jeep Liberty CRD for over 9mos, and the inlet hose from the CCV is oily, the drain hose is oily, but the hose to the turbo inlet plenum is dry - try it, you'll like it
:nopics: I'm interested!
I'd be interested in an electric clutch fan also. That and a 88894035 WP should help a 6.5TD big time.
Well i did this up grade from Heath. And what a difference it made. Hauling a 13,000 lbs trailer and load my truck used to run over 100 deg.. Pulled a load of 30,000 lbs adn it didn't even get up to a 100 deg. Well worth the money.:thumbsup:
Its about $35 less at the vendor that shall remain nameless but will cost $10-20 more in shipping, so its kind of a bust. Although they came out with the Severe Duty fan too, whatever that is.