Boomerang1
Gold Member
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Hmm.. That thing about letting a diesel idle past 10 minutes is a bunch of bull. ive had truck drivers keep there trucks running overnight(8+ HOURS) and they are still going. )</font> Truck drivers don't let their engines idle as you may think. The idle is speed is bumped up from the base idle of around 650 - 750 rpms up to around 1000 rpms. When I press the resume switch on the cruise control, the idle will raise to a preset high idle. If I hold down on the switch, I can make the idle go all the way to max or any where in between. This is helpfull when running the PTO for example. Before electronic engines, trucks had a knob that you could pull to raise the idle. It was just a cable that ran to the the throttle linkage. When I idle up the engine to high idle, I can see the temp gauges rise up to operating temp. When you let a diesel engine idle at low speed, it can not build up enough heat and will let carbon build up in the engine.