Climb every mountain, ...
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11-23-2005, 15:49
Post: #9
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Climb every mountain, ...
Hi Shane
Blue-Bird Book says 900F, Caterpillar says don't exceed 1300F, some consider the range between 900 and 1250 the yellow caution range, while 1300 is RED Line. I cannot even cruise slowly on level ground with only 650. My cruise on level ground and no headwind is about 700 +/- 10. Go figure... ??? Juergen in PA 1991 WLSP36 sfedeli3 <sfedeli3@...> wrote: Hi Guy & Juergen, I've climbed many of the passes out west pedal to the metal in my PT40 and never have seen my pyro over 650 in the summer. Did El Cajon, Wolf Creek and the Grapevine all in July heat. Temps were 195 Water and 230 Oil/Tranny. My turbo seems to get hotter with thicker "cold" oil and yesterday I saw 725 and got scared. What should the pyro max out at? Shane Fedeli 85PT40 Hershey, PA --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "guysmalley" > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, john duke > > > > To all BB guys > > I have a question about climbing in a Blu-Bird. I have my WLSP 36 now for 10 years > and I keep looking at mountain grades more and more. My last BIG endevour was the > Calif. Tehachapi pass from Bakersfield on up to where the windmills are. I pushed the > coach as hard as I could and saw Pyro reach 1050 at times and boost 15+. Water and Oil > temps were never over 190F Tranny was also in limits(95C). I passed almost every truck > on that climb.(Towing my jeep wrangler). Yet I keep watching the grades and reading > about them if they are listed. > > Going into Yosemite from the west, I would not take my BB up those grades, yet I saw > all kinds of busses and motorhomes going right in there. WHAT is the limit that a Blue- > Bird can do?? Am I too timid or over cautious in generalor is a 10% grade too much? I > would love to hear of some of your experiences. > > Thanks > > Juergen in PA > > 1991 WLSP36 > > > Juergen, > I worry more about the swith backs than the grade if you take your time gear it right it > would go up almost anything. I am a cyclist and riden all over the country (including the > road to Yosemite) so I am aware of grades. what I do in real steep climbs= winding roads > is to have my wife drove the tow car. less strain it is not nessasary but on hard swithbacks > it is just easyer. also I research roads before hand so not to get into a bad situation. > bottom line most roads that you would bring the BB on would be under 12% which a > pusher would do. > > guy smalley > 86 pt40 > --------------------------------- YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS Visit your group "WanderlodgeForum" on the web. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: WanderlodgeForum-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. --------------------------------- --------------------------------- Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs. Try it free. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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Messages In This Thread |
Climb every mountain, ... - john duke - 11-22-2005, 13:48
Climb every mountain, ... - john duke - 11-22-2005, 13:48
Climb every mountain, ... - guysmalley - 11-23-2005, 02:45
Climb every mountain, ... - sfedeli3 - 11-23-2005, 04:35
Climb every mountain, ... - Ralph L. Fullenwider - 11-23-2005, 07:52
Climb every mountain, ... - mrdonut12 - 11-23-2005, 08:12
Climb every mountain, ... - rwoodysurplus - 11-23-2005, 11:06
Climb every mountain, ... - David Brady - 11-23-2005, 11:17
Climb every mountain, ... - john duke - 11-23-2005 15:49
Climb every mountain, ... - dspithaler@... - 11-23-2005, 21:42
Climb every mountain, ... - john duke - 11-24-2005, 08:27
Climb every mountain, ... - fred89sp - 12-07-2005, 08:49
Climb every mountain, ... - fred89sp - 12-07-2005, 09:03
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