2 ways, the upper injector body oring, the ones that seal the fuel system, may be leaking, or you have an injector leaking out the weap hole due to internal failure. Put some dye in the upper filter housing and run it for 15 minutes on high idle. Remove the valve covers look at each injector for signs of dye.
Go with "dumb ass", I get the same thing. So "dumb ass" fits nicely because they make themselves look like a "dumb ass".
I come back with "Hey, It pays the bills, and I have more left over than you do each month...Idiot."
Have a real good look at the injector tip on #7. I bet it has a crack in it. If so it may have buggered the piston. Have a look at the glowplug as well, it may be damaged.
It be the law. Nothing comes into Canuckville with out getting the old French conversion for those silly East enders. Damn bill of rights......I kid..really...
6L that had the intake off for some high pressure system repairs, then started to rattle like nobodies business. Dropped #7 then stopped rattling. I pulled the head, wasn't me who did the original job, Found the piston had the crap beat out of it and all 4 valves bent. Surprisingly the head surface and cylinder wall both look fine. From the looks of the marks it seems like a valve keeper fell into the intake port and bounced around until finally embedding itself into the piston. It is getting a new piston and 4 valves, on us.
It loads at the same speed. Looks completely different. The reason we have to wait is everything has to be translated into french before we can use it.
Evacuate the A/C while removing stuff, Leave the shroud halves connected and leave everything attached to the shroud. Lift the shroud up while pulling the rad forward then remove the rad. Some guys don't even take the A/C condenser off, but I do. Have the A/C machine doing its job while it all goes back together.
Heads up to Canadian techs. When we switch over to the new style PTS site, depending on which way you "LINK" to oasis it may be tricky figuring out the multiple vehicle session aspect. If you access it through the "Service publications" link in the "Parts and Service" column you will have to go back and click that link for each new vehicle. If you access it through the"Protect" link in the Training column, then click "Etoolbox", this will get you to the page that allows the use of the "CTRL K" function to open new tabs for multiple sessions. Good luck to us all.
If you look at the design of the pump housing, a slinger on the inside does not make sense. The clearance between the crankshaft and the housing is your slinger. That type of shield has been added to almost all of the oil seals on the trucks that have any chance of coming in contact with dirt, Rear pinion seals and front t-case output seals for example. It is most likely their idea of keeping the dirt away from it. How well it works is yet to be determined.
Sounds like some previous cavitation damage to the front cover. I would definitely start there if all others checked out. If it is bad enough it can reduce coolant flow.
Slinger is a bad description. Maybe a shield is better. To stop the dirt from getting away from, I mean getting to, the sealing surface.....Nothing better that a little extra metal in front of a seal to pack in, I mean keep out the dirt....
There is a new design front seal out now. Has a combination slinger/wear sleeve design. It comes with a stepped plastic installation spacer. There was no literature in the packaging as to the direction of said stepped spacer. Confirmation from hotline, the step with the dots faces the seal. Dots to dots they say.
Read the 5th post in this thread. It's out there, but no definitive yes or no. Just a possibility. I realize not every engine anyone "designs" goes into production, but you never know. If the Euro-diesel won't work, there must be one in the works.
I still don't like that door window.
Our owner saw this 5 cyl. diesel in some Rangers over in Greece, he says they are getting upwards of 50 mpg. He foresees some big sales numbers if they infact come with that engine.
Well there is the issue, I haven't seen many bad rollers yet. The one we did see chewed up the cam pretty bad. I think it's because we get 98% oil field support fleets here and if the truck is drive-able they will drive it to us. It has to be spewing from many orifices before they tow them.