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05-23-2014, 12:56 PM
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#11
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Site Team
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Southern New Mexico
Posts: 10,181
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
It may likely take about 45 minutes of constant driving before the temps are stable. Like Mike mentioned, transients significantly larger than 15 degrees are OK, and common, so don't freak out when you see them. A long, straight, flat road is best to get your measurements.
Herb
__________________
SMB-less as of 02/04/2012. Our savings account is richer, but our adventures are poorer.
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05-23-2014, 02:20 PM
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#12
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Flagstaff, AZ
Posts: 2,001
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
Quote:
Originally Posted by BroncoHauler
It may likely take about 45 minutes of constant driving before the temps are stable. Like Mike mentioned, transients significantly larger than 15 degrees are OK, and common, so don't freak out when you see them. A long, straight, flat road is best to get your measurements.
Herb
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At 65mph or so or 2000 RPM. The transients result from the coolant temp decreasing much more rapidly upon cresting a hill than the oil temp. More info here: http://www.powerstroke.org/forum/genera ... l-psd.html
__________________
2005 E350 RB 6.0 PSD for extended fun
1989 Landcruiser FJ62 for local fun
2011 VW TDI Golf for hwy fun
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05-23-2014, 07:12 PM
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#13
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Bay Area, CA
Posts: 72
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeH
Quote:
Originally Posted by BroncoHauler
It may likely take about 45 minutes of constant driving before the temps are stable. Like Mike mentioned, transients significantly larger than 15 degrees are OK, and common, so don't freak out when you see them. A long, straight, flat road is best to get your measurements.
Herb
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At 65mph or so or 2000 RPM. The transients result from the coolant temp decreasing much more rapidly upon cresting a hill than the oil temp. More info here: http://www.powerstroke.org/forum/genera ... l-psd.html
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Good info, thanks to you both.
__________________
05 PSD SMB_4x4 RB-50
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05-25-2014, 07:26 PM
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#14
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 126
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
Hi Guys,
One my van, I did a EGR delete, new oil cooler and a towing tune by Mike at 5 star focusing on low oil and coolant temps.
I can tell you with these mods the oil cooler is more than sufficient to do the job even towing 10,000 pounds with 35" tires on the van over every single Colorado Hwy Pass.
The BPD cooler is not needed IMO.
Jim
2006 E350 EB
Ujoint Offroad 6" on 35's with 4.56 gears
75,000 miles on 6.0PSD
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05-25-2014, 10:41 PM
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#15
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Flagstaff, AZ
Posts: 2,001
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
Quote:
Originally Posted by capnjim
Hi Guys,
One my van, I did a EGR delete, new oil cooler and a towing tune by Mike at 5 star focusing on low oil and coolant temps.
I can tell you with these mods the oil cooler is more than sufficient to do the job even towing 10,000 pounds with 35" tires on the van over every single Colorado Hwy Pass.
The BPD cooler is not needed IMO.
Jim
2006 E350 EB
Ujoint Offroad 6" on 35's with 4.56 gears
75,000 miles on 6.0PSD
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I agree with you providing a good flush of the block was done in conjunction with the EGR delete and new oil cooler. Otherwise, the OEM oil cooler is going to clog again. What EGR delete kit did you go with?
And just for discussion sake, I'm curious what 5Star told you regarding their tune. I don't see how any tune that increases HP (ie., a tow tune) can focus (presume you mean reduce) oil and coolant temps. A custom tune advances the timing to increase the power resulting in higher operating temps. Perhaps their tune is primarily a transmission tune with quicker and firmer shift points?
__________________
2005 E350 RB 6.0 PSD for extended fun
1989 Landcruiser FJ62 for local fun
2011 VW TDI Golf for hwy fun
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06-04-2014, 01:33 PM
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#16
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2013
Posts: 9
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
I have recently had the Bulletproof oil cooler installed on my 2005 RB50 with an Aluminess front bumper. The shop cut rectangles out of the front and back of the bumper to allow for air flow. It looks pretty sharp and has generally kept the oil temps down. They originally cut the hole in the front of the bumper to small and it prevented good air flow. The engine oil got pretty hot on a steep grade here in Tahoe. They made the hole larger yesterday. I have not tested it on a steep grade yet. The only install issue was the location of the new oil filter. When installed per Bulletproof's instructions, it touched the front drive line. The shop removed the driveline to eliminate any chance of damage to the oil filter. I am taking the van back to the shop next Monday to have them retrofit a bracket to move the oil filter over a bit. They will then reinstall the front driveline. I will keep you posted on how it turns out. I will upload photos soon.
Sloan
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06-04-2014, 06:08 PM
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#17
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Bay Area, CA
Posts: 72
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
Quote:
Originally Posted by zephyr
I have recently had the Bulletproof oil cooler installed on my 2005 RB50 with an Aluminess front bumper. The shop removed the driveline to eliminate any chance of damage to the oil filter. I am taking the van back to the shop next Monday to have them retrofit a bracket to move the oil filter over a bit. They will then reinstall the front driveline. I will keep you posted on how it turns out. I will upload photos soon.
Sloan
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I appreciate the update. I look forward to the pictures.
Now, am I correct in assuming that the "driveline" is the drive shaft?
Thanks,
David
__________________
05 PSD SMB_4x4 RB-50
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06-04-2014, 10:05 PM
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#18
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2013
Posts: 9
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Re: 6.0L, Aluminess front bumper, Bullet Prof Diesel oil coo
I misspoke. Drive shaft is the proper term.
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