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JoeH

Pedigreed Bulldog
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Posts posted by JoeH

  1. I've got a home made one our spare parts endt676 is sitting in. It's got legs bolted to the flywheel housing and I forget what up front. I think that engine has threaded bosses on the side/front of the engine, because we had the timing cover off it a year ago to steal the camshaft.  Legs are welded to C channel bases that are web section up so our forklift can come in and grab it from the side.

    • Like 1
  2. 4 hours ago, Mack Technician said:

    P= pump 

    L= line

    N=nozzle

    used to represent all the pre (to mid year) 1998 that had a jerk pump fuel system. E-tech was legally a PLN, but not a Jerk system and so no one ever referred to it as PLN. 

    So what is a Jerk system? Is the endt676 a PLN system then?

    Is PLN basically to differentiate between a common rail system and a traditional fuel injection system?

  3. Not sure how far the Jake's open the exhaust valve, but they can't have it opened enough to interfere at TDC. Idle injection advance is ballpark 18°, so injection and combustion have already happened by the time the Jake starts opening. That last 18° the combustion works to slow the engine, then near TDC the exhaust valve starts to open, venting the remaining pressure generated by the combustion.  

    Not sure if diesels change injection advance based on rpm.

    Hobert may be on to something with the butterfly brake not working in tandem with a traditional.  The Jake doesn't dump the "compressed air" it dumps the cylinders "reward" combustion. It works to make the combustion but the combustion is vented before it can be turned into mechanical power. Thus, it's a force of resistance.

    An international oil delivery truck i drive in the winter has a butterfly style, and that brake will throw you through the windshield! But that's a single axle truck, not a 107000# truck. At that weight you simply need to drive smart and maintain a safe rig. (That goes for all weights)

    • Like 1
  4. That's sad. Pete's are nice highway trucks but they don't have the ground clearance Mack's have. He's gonna need to watch his steer axle fenders, the mudflaps tend to get pinched backing up, ripping the fenders off. Gotta watch the fuel tanks too.

    If I were running highway paving I'd probably buy a Pete, but for site work off in the dirt I'd take a Mack all day long.

  5. You don't need to pull the plug to check oil level, just to add oil. Clean the window, it has add and full lines on it. If you have to add oil you might be able to do so through that drain plug on the bottom left of the cap in the picture. 

  6. Watch for engine codes.

    When the key is first turned on you should see the lightning bolt turn on for a bit then go off. That's the check engine light. If it stays on, with the cruise control switch off hold down the set/decel button a few secobdst until the check engine light starts doing stuff. It'll blink out a 2 digit fault code. Write it down. Hit the set/decel again, it'll blink another fault code if there is one. Keep doing it til it doesn't give any new codes any more.

    Some of us here have invested in the books on these trucks and can tell you what the codes mean.

    The tiniest dent in the side of that computer is all it takes to destroy it, or so I'm told, so be careful with it if you buy the truck. Clean looking engine!

    • Like 1
  7. I had a slight miss on my 95 e7-350 last year, 2nd set of fuel filters cleared it up. Almost sounded like the Jake brake was engaging at higher (15-1600) RPMs.  Pulling the Jake wires off the heads eliminated that possibility. First set of fuel filters made it good for a day or two, second set made it go away, hasn't happened since. 18,600+ hours, 250,000 miles, original engine, never rebuilt that we know of.

      Only ever get 26 psi boost out of it, would love to know how you guys get 30+ psi! This dog is no maxidyne, we thought there was something wrong with the engine because it just didn't pull like we thought a Mack 350 should. But we had only ever driven endt676 maxidyne 2 sticks prior, and this truck makes the same boost they made. We just had to get used to a totally different power band.

  8. One of our yard trucks is hard to start in cold weather. We just hit it with a little ether to get her going. But we only use the truck once every few years just to shuffle it around. Our other yard truck (crane) has a blown head gasket but fires up from a gentle bump of the key. Doesn't really care on the outside temp.  Both are Mack 237 horse motors. 

  9. On 3/6/2019 at 10:50 PM, cfd511 said:

    I don’t use conveyor or any of that stuff anymore. Will get pictures in am

    What are you planning to do with the old pump? Might be interested in it if you're local. It sounds like a Section Pump to me.  One input shaft, multiple pump sections in one unit, each with their own output hose. Used for multiple functions to be used simultaneously but need different amounts of oil flow per minute.

    We are rebuilding one volumetric concrete mixer right now that we have a pump for, but could use another section pump to convert our other truck from a piston pump. (POS pump for the application...)

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