Peterbilt in the Cold: Part Two

Continuing the “winter start” part one thread:

Starting and warming up the engine on my Peterbilt Motorhome Conversion is something I like to do every week or tens days during the winter here in West Michigan, where temps can easily drop into the teens during January and February. These winter starts are intended to get the Cat C15 up to operating temperature and put a fresh charge into both the starting battery bank and the house battery bank.

Both battery banks are comprised of four Group 31 batteries. The starting batteries are AGM type; the house batteries are deep cycle golf cart flooded type.

Now, back to the story . . .

The APU is now warming up nicely; pumping 14.2 volts into the starting bank, and beginning to fill both the cab and the bunk with warm air. My butt is slowly warming also. I’ve got Mr Coffee plugged into 110 vac and it’s starting to perk. Life is good . . .

The engine temp gauge on the dash is mechanical and as the coolant begins to warm in the APU, the main engine gauge begins to rise ever so slightly also. The coffee finishes up and I climb into the driver’s seat to start the main engine.

Because my C15 is a “computer controlled” engine, it aitomatically goes into “cold start mode” when the outside temp drops below 32 degrees. In fact, this engine, a model 6NZ, was Cat’s first computer controlled designed engine from the ground up; as opposed to the 3406E which was adopted to be computer controllled.

My engine ALWAYS starts on the first try, even when it’s -15 outside. In fact, it starts better than the small Kubota on the APU. Today is no exception . . . the big Cat fires right up; a bit rough a first till everything settles out. A puff of white smoke and all is good. I am constantly amazed with this engine, almost a million miles, never rebuilt and still running strong!

It takes the Cat about an hour to come up to temp, even with the idle set at 900 RPM. When up to temperature the water is 150 degrees and the oil temp is 125 degrees. A bit lower than nominal when rolling down the road but still good enough for everything to warm up nicely. The battery banks are topped off at 14.2 volts. All is good!

Turn off the engine; run through the Shutdown check list, and begin to wait another week or ten days till I can enjoy another Winter Start and spend some more time enjoying my Peterbilt 379.

Until next time . . . thanks for reading!
 

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java

Expedition Leader
That looks awesome! Any mkre details about it? Did you build it?

Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
 
Java, Tnx for asking! It’s a 2003 standard 379 Pete road tractor. I bought it in 2010 with 879,000 miles. Dropped the front drivers, extended the frame 6 feet in the back, and bought a new 16’ Morgan drybox which sits on the frame rails. Fixed up the box with a door and windows; finished the inside after doing electrical and plumbing and insulation. Runs like a top! Weights 22,000 pounds; carries 250 gallons of fuel; 50 gallons of fresh water; capacity of 50 gray water; length 35’; height 12’ to the top of the stacks. 560 hp Cat C15; 18 speed Eaton-Fuller trans; 3.36 rear end. Get 10-12 mpg; cruises at 60 mph at 1200 rpm. If you want to know more, just ask!
 

tatanka48

Active member
SH4, you sure bring back some warm rememberies

as an OTR driver i found myself enjoying a cuppa in the driver's seat on many a cold morning

my rigs had Optimum Idle and all i had to do was set the cabin temp as desired and the thing would keep me comfortable by starting and shutting down thru-out the night as i was in the bunk

those cold mid night start-ups were shaky(it WAS a Freight Shaker after all) as you mentioned butt i got used to them as well as the reefer cycling

it would take a coupla days to get used to sleeping in a totaly still n quiet bed when i was home

THANKS FOR THE REMEMBERIES

and Merry Christmas

IMG_0053.jpg

T
 
T: I park overnight in a lot of truck stops and Walmart’s. Engines idling all night doesn’t bother me at all, but reefers starting and stopping continuously can be a bother.

Thanks for reading my post!
 

DarkBladeRunner

Active member
Reading this makes me kind of wish my engine had a few more bells and whistles... (I have a Deutz F6L413... no computer, no glow plugs, no radiator, no nothing except an idle knob and a flame start). I've been able to start her at -25C with the help of Ether but it had smoke coming out the wazoo and the throttle maxed out for a good minute before she would keep going just on idle.

What's the reason for getting a semi truck for this particular project? (other than being really cool).
 

GHI

Adventurer
Hello from the east side of the State. I like your routine and your rig. I do something similar, but more so to exercise the genny in my puny Class B. Turn on a movie and plug in a portable heater when it's -0. My neighbors must think I'm a little off.
 

rlrenz

Explorer
T: I park overnight in a lot of truck stops and Walmart’s. Engines idling all night doesn’t bother me at all, but reefers starting and stopping continuously can be a bother.

Thanks for reading my post!
"Reefers starting all night" reminds me of a time when I was a LOT younger, and I had to baby sit a load of refrigerated strawberries overnight. It was hot, with no cab AC, so I decided to camp out inside the trailer. Nice and cool sounded great, except as noisy as the Thermo-King units were from the outside, they were a lot worse from the inside. I didn't get any sleep as I recall -- but at least, I had strawberries to nibble on.
 

cjken

Explorer
How did you connect the box to the frame??
Does it flex? Or is it stiff to the frame.
I would love to do a truck like that one day.
Maybe a bit shorter though.
 

GabAlmighty

Observer
It's always fun firing up a rig at -40...

How did you connect the box to the frame??
Does it flex? Or is it stiff to the frame.
I would love to do a truck like that one day.
Maybe a bit shorter though.

I would be EXTREMELY surprised if that frame flexed at all with that "load" on it.
 

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