Gordon Gould
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2007
- Messages
- 6,640
- Location
- NorthEastern, VT
- Tractor
- Kubota L3010DT, Kubota M5640SUD, Dresser TD7G Dozer
I have a small Dresser Dozer with a 4 cylinder IH or Cummins D240N motor (not sure when they changed over). It has no glow plugs and I have not had it long enough to know its cold weather quirks. It is the first deisel I have had w/o glow plugs.
In the summer it starts in 2 or 3 seconds. This morning was about 20*F and it had been setting over a week. It was the first time I tried starting it below 40*F. It turned good but I had to try 5 or 6 times before it started. I was reluctant to let it crank for more than 5 seconds or so each time. After the first try it sounded like a flooded gas engine that turned easy and wanted to start but just wouldn't catch. Finally it did.
I had the throttle almost full.
I would like to know if this is normal and/or is there something I could have done differently to make it start easier. I am running the same fuel/stanadyne mix I run in my tractor. It is parked in the woods and it would be a hassle if I ran the batteries down ( It has two in parallel ) trying to start it.
Thanks in advance for any advise
gg
In the summer it starts in 2 or 3 seconds. This morning was about 20*F and it had been setting over a week. It was the first time I tried starting it below 40*F. It turned good but I had to try 5 or 6 times before it started. I was reluctant to let it crank for more than 5 seconds or so each time. After the first try it sounded like a flooded gas engine that turned easy and wanted to start but just wouldn't catch. Finally it did.
I had the throttle almost full.
I would like to know if this is normal and/or is there something I could have done differently to make it start easier. I am running the same fuel/stanadyne mix I run in my tractor. It is parked in the woods and it would be a hassle if I ran the batteries down ( It has two in parallel ) trying to start it.
Thanks in advance for any advise
gg