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Inline fuel heaters?
by
flash319
on 15 Jan, 2008 09:20
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Does anyone have one of these in their cars? Do they help with starting or just to help pump the fuel? What brand have you tried?
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#1
by
the caveman
on 15 Jan, 2008 11:03
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unless it's super cold [yellowknife cold] you don't want to heat diesel. i sell vegetherm inline heaters for vegoil systems. i wire them so they only work when using wvo
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#2
by
flash319
on 15 Jan, 2008 11:07
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So heating the air is better for starting, thus glowplugs? I have an old Ford tractor that does not have glow plugs and it is in the middle of the bush, so this was sort of an off topic thread. I was thinking of doing it to both engines though. I heard somewhere that cummins has some kind of an inline air heater, like a toaster on the intake. is this true?
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#3
by
subsonic
on 15 Jan, 2008 11:23
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Many fuel filters have a built in heater element. Racor makes great diesel fuel water sperators with the option of a built in fuel heater probe.
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#4
by
914turboford
on 15 Jan, 2008 14:19
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Ford/Navistar IDI 6.9's (probably 7.3's, also) have a heater in the fuel line. Not sure when it activates. You can find these motors in JY's so if you decide you need one you might consider it.
Brian
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#5
by
the caveman
on 15 Jan, 2008 16:04
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fuel line and fuel filter heaters are only for extreme cold, and for tractor trailers which are being driven all day in cold weather. some diesels such as vw's have a small valve in the return line which lets some fuel back into the fuel filter to heat the fuel to a certain extent, but it won't help start the car if the filter is already frozen.normally diesel should not be heated. A4 Tdi's automatics even have fuel coolers.
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#6
by
clbanman
on 16 Jan, 2008 03:08
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So heating the air is better for starting, thus glowplugs? I have an old Ford tractor that does not have glow plugs and it is in the middle of the bush, so this was sort of an off topic thread. I was thinking of doing it to both engines though. I heard somewhere that cummins has some kind of an inline air heater, like a toaster on the intake. is this true?
Yes, some of the Cummins engines have heaters in the intake passages. The activation is controlled by the engine ECU based on various temperature sensors in the engine.
As far as heating the fuel, our trucks actually have coolers in the fuel system so that the fuel does not get too hot. Fuel should be cool for higher density, heating would actually lean out the cylinder air/fuel mixture.
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#7
by
jimfoo
on 16 Jan, 2008 07:00
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Maybe you could put some peltiers with fins in the intake so you could flick a switch and heat the air when starting. Though people usually think of them relating to cooling, they output 150% more heat than the energy you put into them.
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#8
by
bigblockchev
on 16 Jan, 2008 15:19
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I have an old Onan generator which has glow plugs and air heaters. The air heaters look like a sparkplug with a 1" diameter spring instead of the plug bit on the inside. They would be easy enough to mount in a largish threaded hole in the intake manifold. They are kind of pricy though over $100 from Cummins/Onan. Cheers Dan
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#9
by
flash319
on 16 Jan, 2008 16:11
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Don't the TDI's have like 3 glow plogs mounted in a circle on the intake or is it in the coolent?
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#10
by
jimfoo
on 16 Jan, 2008 16:31
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Coolant.
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#11
by
subsonic
on 16 Jan, 2008 19:41
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fuel line and fuel filter heaters are only for extreme cold,
What do you consider extreme cold? My neck of the woods is going to be around 3 degrees F on and off this week. Thats 29 degrees below freezing.
So is diesel at it's best for power when it is just above the point where wax crystals will form?
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#12
by
westcoaster
on 16 Jan, 2008 20:10
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The cummins motor (B 5.9) is a direct injected diesel. It does not have glow plugs for cold weather starting. It does have grid heater that pre heats the intake air prior to it arriving in the cylinder.
Turn the key on, lights dim as the grid heater cycles. Grid heater shuts off, crank to start. After starting, grid heaters cycle on and off until the engine reaches a certain temp then the grid heaters stop and the motor simply runs on it's own heat. (that's why you'll see a dodge truck's lights dimming and getting brighter as it's warming up)
The cummins cold start is a slick setup. It works quite well when temps get down. The only thing is, it may not work on any thing other than a direct injected diesel....
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#13
by
BlackTieTD
on 18 Jan, 2008 18:49
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fuel line and fuel filter heaters are only for extreme cold,
What do you consider extreme cold? My neck of the woods is going to be around 3 degrees F on and off this week. Thats 29 degrees below freezing.
that's not all that cold. i don't plug in the block heater until it gets down -20C (-4F) and i've never needed a fuel heater or anything like that. (its -24C in yellowknife right now)
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#14
by
harry_the_face
on 07 Feb, 2008 04:09
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Fuel should be cool for higher density, heating would actually lean out the cylinder air/fuel mixture.
Wouldn't a lean fuel mixture be an advantage for fuel economy, But bad for power?