Gale Hawkins
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,265
- Location
- Murray, KY
- Tractor
- 1948 Allis Chambers Model B 1976 265 MF / 1983 JD 310B Backhoe / 1966 Ford 3000 Diesel / 1980 3600 Diesel
A several years ago I was the manager for an oil company and one of our delivery drivers was delivering gasoline to a bulk plant, the engine of the truck ran the pump to transfer the fuel, and the fumes from the gasoline were enough to run the diesel in his truck and there was a runaway. The driver was killed. Since that time all the truck engines have been equipped with a flapper system that will completely block off the air supply to the engine.
When in college I dispatched from midnight until 7am for an oil drilling company in Abilene TX and one mud truck had the flapper system in case it got in a low spot filled with natural gas hit in the drilling process.
It was kind of funny how new drivers would kill it by pulling the air shut-off then call for service because it would not start. I never saw it but had one of the guys in the shop had explained the system to me. It always took the guys at the rig by surprise when I would say before I call for service open the hood and on the left side open the emergency kill air intake because pulling it would close the flap but pushing it back in would not open it by design.
On one forum some guy poured Sea Foam into his diesel intake like it was a gas engine. He got lucky per his post because he just bent push rods so he did not have to tear it down.
A run away engine can be a killer as noted. An air kill device can be handy but never say a tractor with one or most any diesel engine.