Alway check that the bleeder valve is fully off
Running an Airdog pump and filters on the frame with 1/2" hose direct to the IP, no more bleeder valve.
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Alway check that the bleeder valve is fully off
Running an Airdog pump and filters on the frame with 1/2" hose direct to the IP, no more bleeder valve.
Valve at the front of the engine.
If you are seeing the egt cause the ect rise- an inner cooler ought to catch your eye...
Just curious, what was the ambient temp while this was happening?
Huh. I wouldn’t have expected much heat trouble at that temp, especially with those low IATs. The converter certainly isn’t helping, but then again that isn’t running through the radiator....though it is still in the cooling stack.Roughly 70 degrees ambient.
Huh. I wouldn’t have expected much heat trouble at that temp, especially with those low IATs. The converter certainly isn’t helping, but then again that isn’t running through the radiator....though it is still in the cooling stack.
That’s true, that is a variable in your setup.It is a used Cummins radiator, it could not be fully flowing or gummed up somewhere. I didn't want to put holes and new ports in a new radiator until I knew it would work, so I started with this one.
@Chewy1576 If it were me, I'd pull that transmission cooler out of the stack, slap the biggest CFM fan that fits on it (and possibly get a larger cooler with a higher BTU shedding capability and/or have Chris coat one up for you) and find someplace you can mount it horizontally (parallel to the floor/road) out of the engine compartment and perhaps next to a frame rail for some protection. The fan (thermostatic switch controlled) will provide plenty of airflow through the cooler.
Pulling that large tranny cooler out of the stack does two things: 1) It increases airflow through the A/C, the CAC and radiator core and 2) It removes a source of heat that's being shed into the above mentioned components