SeniorCitizen
Lawn Addict
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2010
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With a diesel engine and constant speed governor , does a diesel with a constant speed governor start the engine at wot
Does adjusting the throttle while cranking make a engine start better ?Clarify please
I agree with your assessment. Have a Kubota D902 in a Ditch Witch Mini skid that is a pain to start cold below 40 degrees. I take that back. Fires easily with glow plug but because of the hydraulics kills the engine. The Kubota owners manual says to start at half throttle, which I hate. Below 30 forget about it. Come back when it is warmer. You can get it started with multiple crank cycles and lots of white smoke.In my experience I would say no, I have been around a good number of farm tractor diesels we had to do winter starts both with heaters and cold start with and without glow plugs. It scares me to have the throttle anymore than 5-10% if any during start up. To get that momentary rev-up clattering before you back it off scares me. I do have Kubota diesels on a Grasshopper and a Bobcat Skid loader. Both of those I start with throttle in idle position, above 40 dg. and below 40dg. I either use pre-heat glow plugs or block heaters to bring them up to smooth starting temperature, In my opinion idle starts using some sort of pre-heat/block heat below 50 dg. helps extend diesel life.
Many small petrol engines, on things like mowers, usually require choke to be applied by moving the throttle lever past the max rpm position - this is the main reason why they go to WOT at start.Gas engines are at WOT at cranking RPM . Is a diesel the same ?