Pyrometer safe temps
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09-24-2006, 02:29
Post: #1
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Pyrometer safe temps
Jay
Mine has reached 1100 on I-77 at Fancy Gap coming north in VA. I think that is high but I was almost at the top. I have heard that 1200 is too hot. Don 89 SP 36' Butler, PA Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for Maob, UT. Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in central IA this morning. Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on hard pulls. Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 degrees quickly. On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp up there? [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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09-24-2006, 03:26
Post: #2
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Pyrometer safe temps
Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for
Maob, UT. Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in central IA this morning. Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on hard pulls. Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 degrees quickly. On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp up there? All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had more lately) Thanks Jay Darst 85PT40 Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- road event in Moab, UT. |
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09-24-2006, 04:05
Post: #3
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Pyrometer safe temps
My FC with out charge air cooler will get up to 1100 on a hard climb, the truck
that has much more fuel delivery and a charge air cooler rarely shows over 900. MH ----- Original Message ----- From: Jay Darst To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:26 AM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Pyrometer safe temps Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for Maob, UT. Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in central IA this morning. Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on hard pulls. Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 degrees quickly. On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp up there? All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had more lately) Thanks Jay Darst 85PT40 Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- road event in Moab, UT. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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09-24-2006, 04:47
Post: #4
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Pyrometer safe temps
Jay,
Have a heart some poor souls have to try and build their self esteem by trashing others. Remember Chavez at the UN he was trying to outdo the nut from Iran. Made him feel powerful. Howard Truitt Camilla, Ga. 86 PT40 ----- Original Message ----- From: Jay Darst To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 11:26 AM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Pyrometer safe temps Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for Maob, UT. Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in central IA this morning. Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on hard pulls. Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 degrees quickly. On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp up there? All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had more lately) Thanks Jay Darst 85PT40 Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- road event in Moab, UT. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Internal Virus Database is out-of-date. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.405 / Virus Database: 268.12.3/445 - Release Date: 9/11/2006 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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09-24-2006, 04:53
Post: #5
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Pyrometer safe temps
Jay, my 8v92 rarely gets to 750. My manual says that's good.
Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40 Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: Jay Darst To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 10:26 AM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Pyrometer safe temps Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for Maob, UT. Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in central IA this morning. Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on hard pulls. Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 degrees quickly. On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp up there? All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had more lately) Thanks Jay Darst 85PT40 Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- road event in Moab, UT. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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09-24-2006, 08:40
Post: #6
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Pyrometer safe temps
Nice site Kerry Thanks I am always worried about that. My Truck Garage
said it could melt down above 1200%. Don 89 SP 36' Butler, PA This site says 1300 degrees max: _http://flashoffroadhttp://flashoffrhttp:...://flahtt_ (http://flashoffroad.com/Accessories/Gaug...st/EGT.htm) Kerry 82 Fc 35 Denver [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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09-24-2006, 09:44
Post: #7
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Pyrometer safe temps
It depends on where the pyrometer is located. It can be before or after the
turbo. Temperatures of exhaust gases can be about 200 degrees cooler after passing thru the turbo. I'd want to keep it below 1200 degrees pre-turbo. I noticed something interesting this summer when my crossover pipe was failing and the turbo not turning as fast resulting in less air to the engine and more black exhaust. The pyrometer temperatures went up. With the crossover pipe repaired and a clean air filter, the temperatures dropped a couple of hundred degrees. Prior to the repairs, I would see about 1050/75 at the top of a steep climb like Raton Pass on the CO/NM border. I don't think I've seen anything within 150 degrees of that since the repair. I dont have oil cooled pistons so I have to keep a closer eye on the pyro. Kerry 82 Fc 35 Denver --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Jay Darst" > > Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for > Maob, UT. > > Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in > central IA this morning. > > Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger > hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 > degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to > maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has > been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on > hard pulls. > > Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? > > While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 > degrees quickly. > > On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am > not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp > up there? > > All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had > more lately) > > Thanks > Jay Darst > 85PT40 > Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my > brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- > road event in Moab, UT. > |
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09-24-2006, 09:54
Post: #8
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Pyrometer safe temps
This site says 1300 degrees max:
http://flashoffroad.com/Accessories/Gaug...st/EGT.htm Kerry 82 Fc 35 Denver --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Jay Darst" > > Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for > Maob, UT. > > Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in > central IA this morning. > > Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger > hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 > degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to > maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has > been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on > hard pulls. > > Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? > > While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 > degrees quickly. > > On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am > not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp > up there? > > All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had > more lately) > > Thanks > Jay Darst > 85PT40 > Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my > brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- > road event in Moab, UT. > |
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09-24-2006, 13:37
Post: #9
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Pyrometer safe temps
Jay, exhaust back pressure may have something to do with it. The
other thing is gauge accuracy and probe/sender location. I think you gotta get on the fuel prior to a load to spin the turbo finns. the 3208 can crank at 2800 R and the DD are maxed near 2,000. I never get hotter than 750 on my 8v92. may be fatal to drive a dd like a cat. Wont hurt to use a Raytec on a lower idle reading then after a hill climb with someone reading the gauge inside (will cool as you walk 40 feet back). Dont forget to check the Raytec for accuracy. I take an oral 98.6 reading, you may find other methods more familiar. HugoC 94ptRomolandCa --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Jay Darst" > > Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for > Maob, UT. > > Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in > central IA this morning. > > Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger > hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached 1,050 > degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to > maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has > been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on > hard pulls. > > Is 1,050 for 10-20 seconds too hot? > > While off the throttle down the hill, the pyrometer drops to 700 > degrees quickly. > > On my PT w/6V92, the pyro never reaches 900 degrees. Wonder if I am > not getting enough fuel to make it work hard enough to get the temp > up there? > > All comments welcome (except some of the smart ass ones we've had > more lately) > > Thanks > Jay Darst > 85PT40 > Springfield, IL sitting at home, traveling vicariously thru my > brother Dan and his wife Barb who are attending a Land Rover off- > road event in Moab, UT. > |
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09-24-2006, 13:47
Post: #10
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Pyrometer safe temps
Thanks guys, great information.
Sounds like a self inflicted limit of 1,100 degrees is a safe bet. Thats about the max that Dan's gage has read. When we took Dan's FC to RIV, we crossed Mont Eagle in high gear. Crest the hill at about 50mph, the pyrometer was not working at the time(the fix was to put the wire back on the gage, by the way...:-|, daaa), so we had no idea of the temp. That was 2 years ago, had no related problems since. Thanks again, everyone, for your information/input, been very helpful! Jay Darst 85PT40 Springfield, IL where my Bird rests... dam it. I'd rather be on my way to Moab! ;~} --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Gregory OConnor" > > Jay, exhaust back pressure may have something to do with it. The > other thing is gauge accuracy and probe/sender location. I think you > gotta get on the fuel prior to a load to spin the turbo finns. the > 3208 can crank at 2800 R and the DD are maxed near 2,000. I never > get hotter than 750 on my 8v92. may be fatal to drive a dd like a > cat. > > Wont hurt to use a Raytec on a lower idle reading then after a hill > climb with someone reading the gauge inside (will cool as you walk 40 > feet back). Dont forget to check the Raytec for accuracy. I take an > oral 98.6 reading, you may find other methods more familiar. > > HugoC > 94ptRomolandCa > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Jay Darst" > > > > > Brother Dan left Huntley, IL (1 hour west of Chicago) headed for > > Maob, UT. > > > > Was on the phone with him as he is traveling thru some hills in > > central IA this morning. > > > > Had a question regarding pyrometer temps. As he crests the bigger > > hills, the pyromter reaches 1,000 degrees. One hill it reached > 1,050 > > degrees as he made the summit. Interestingly, he was able to > > maintain 55 mph in high gear at the crest. The aneroid valve has > > been adjusted to provide good fuel volume with only light smoke on > > hard pulls. |
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