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Anybody want to buy a Ford Truck?

Faster horses said:
Thanks for your good advice, Diamond S. Nice to have someone with some knowledge here that can simplify things or let us know what to check out.!

For anyone who wants to do their own checks, or have someone do it for you, from my experience, once the lift pump gets down to 7 or 8 PSI of fuel pressure at idle, you'll start seeing a hit to power and economy. Brand new is 15 PSI. Dodge uses some kind of garbage volume test now, but the volume they use is insufficent to ensure proper economy. When I owned my performance shop, we dyno tested a couple thousand Dodge's and saw up to 40 HP hits when the lift pump pressure dropped to 7 PSI at idle. At 6 PSI, you would have insufficient pressure to supply the injector pump at wide open throttle and you'd do damage to the injector pump.

If you find you are having alot of lift pump issues, the best fix is to buy a set of drilled out banjo bolts. There are 5 bolts in the system (2 lift, 2 fuel filter canister, 1 injector pump) and they are very restrictive. So restrictive that they drive the lift pump into a rapid cycle bypass mode (bypassing on and off quickly) and it would destroy the bypass valve. The banjos are available for around 40 bucks, and are very easy to change. We found it gave us another 100,000 klicks of pump life on stock trucks.

On the intercooler issue, rigging a test on your own is fairly simple. Take two pieces of 3" pipe and weld ends on them. Make sure they are air tight welds. On one of them, drill a hole and tap it to accept a Schrader valve (tire valve). Pull the intercooler boot off the air horn, and put the valve equipped end in the hose and clamp it down. Then pull the other hose off the turbocharger and put the other test adapter in that boot. Air the system up to 35 PSI, and use a bottle of soapy water to spray the intercooler down. Whereever you see bubbles, you have a leak. Also, I forgot to mention the clamps. Dodge used the cheapest clamps available, and they'll tend to back off over time. I should have mentioned this before, as its more common than the tank cracking. So spray down all the clamps and check for leaks. Spray all the boots down too, as its not unheard of for a boot to spring a leak, especially in salt heavy areas.

Faster horses said:
So far the 2006 is right with the 2002 as far as fuel mileage.

Interesting. You guys are one of the few. Up here in Canuckville, our diesel is of relatively poor quality to US diesel, so we saw even greater hits. My 2001, stock, used to run about 18 mpg. My 2003 (introduction of the common rail) dropped this average to 16 and my 2005 is down to around 14 mpg. The 2001, with the addition of a timing box and a good set of balanced injectors, would get upwards of 22 mpg. Using US fuel, and correcting the gallons back to Imperial, I'd get 24 with ease.

I'm actually selling my 2005 and stepping back into a 1994 - 2002 truck. While I like the handling of the 2003+ trucks, the seats on the 1997 - 2002 trucks were far more comfortable (in so far as premium leather ones were concerned anyway), the 16" tires much cheaper to replace than 17s, and I still have a few performance parts for the older trucks kicking around that I never sold when I shut down.

Rod
 
Rod, did you ever get into any conversions?

I was reading about putting the 5.9 into my chev. Looks not too bad but pricey if I hire it done.

I can get an 89 dodge with a 92 5.9 in it for 4 grand about 180,000 km truck is crap but the engine is sweet.

My 93 chev is in pretty good shape, except the blown head gasket on the 6.5. It would cost me about 6 grand to do the engine and I hate to just pop a head gasket in at 315,000.

I had upgraded the 6.5 with 4" exhaust and a K&N filter boost kit and gauges, helped a lot but still lacked power.

Could be an empty weight of 14,000 pounds and then 9-12 cows in a load could drag it back. :lol:

Anyway I was getting 14 mpg empty (no trailer) and 11 loaded.
 
Jason,

You innovative Canadians are fun to watch, and I've never seen a better P/U motor than the 5.9 Cummins (this is really an old Cummins but the electronic controls made all the dif). I've seen a book on this swap as the brain issue is a little involved.

I heard about some Canadian putting a Detroit Diesel in a 1069 NH hay wagon - I'm impressed.

I used to read a mag called "farm show" that was about producer innovations. Now it seems like I'm busy enough doing what must be done to play in the shop with my Dad
 
Brad S said:
I used to read a mag called "farm show" that was about producer innovations. Now it seems like I'm busy enough doing what must be done to play in the shop with my Dad

Brad, I dunno if you get any Canadian stations at all down there, but there is a show called Prairie Farm Report you may want to check out. From time to time, there are Canuck farmer inventions that will boggle your mind. I watched one show on a home-built 4 wheel drive tractor, and another with a guy who mounted a 350 Chevy engine, complete with automatic trans into a 55 Massey. He used it for hauling hay. He had the 3 speed "power shift" on the automatic, plus the original 4 speeds and high/lo range. He could run 55 mph on the highway with it :lol:

Rod
 

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