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Cummins ISB 6.7 360 hspwr normal engine temp range

et2
Explorer
Explorer
Watching our year old MH temp last night coming home from vacation and I noticed it running at about 201 - 210 mostly at 205 degree. Now it ran going during trip out about 198 - 201 but it was cooler outside, yesterday was 86 degrees - about 10 degrees warmer than the trip out.

The fan kicked in around two times cooling quickly to 192. My question is what are you other people seeing with this engine and normal operating temps? It just seems a little hot. According to Cummins it's within normal temps. Fan on is suppose to be around 212 - 215 and engine shutdown at 220.

So I'm curious if it was hotter in outside air temp say in the 90's am I to expect much higher engine temps or a fan on constantly? The next worry would be mountain pulling in hot temps.

Thanks
16 REPLIES 16

2Bargos
Explorer
Explorer
I drive a bus for our local school system,All of our newer buses run higher temp (205-210 range)than we thought was normal. after speaking with the International techs we were told not to worry about temps until they got above 220.
In years past I owned a couple of mack tandems coal trucks and if they got around 200 we stopped or downshifted so temp would drop.
The newer engines are designed to run hotter and as was mentioned it is due to getting a cleaner burn and cleaner emissions
FWIW I personally would contact Cummins and speak to a Tech and get a real expert opinion .that if you have a problem you can catch it before you destroy a good engine,or if its normal you can have peace of mind when operating it.
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P_Kennedy
Explorer
Explorer
Assuming the gauges are actually accurate the new engines as quoted run hotter to burn off the bad stuff and the DPF's or DEF systems are there to burn off carbon residue. These systems also cause heat retention however the coolant temperature is the restriction in running diesel engines hotter for better efficiency and power. Adding 6000 lbs will slow the vehicle on a grade slightly but only affects the cooling system in cycling times. Allison transmissions should be run in "performance mode" on long hills to assist cooling by raising shift points which as stated increases coolant flow and maintains higher air movement via the fan through the radiator. If you are still running to hot manually backshift a gear and run the engine on the governor which decreases the load on the engine with max cooling.
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dan-nickie
Explorer
Explorer
et2 wrote:
dan-nickie wrote:
In the last couple week mine has been running 198-200 on the flats in above 90 weather.
Same engine.
Any incline and it would heat up a little until I got over the hill.


That sure looks like a Ford engine? :W
Can't compare the two.


You been looking at my profile? 🙂
I traded that one off on a new DP.
Just have not updated the profile yet.
Dan and Nickie
2014 Forest River Berkshire 390RB

et2
Explorer
Explorer
dubdub07 wrote:
All I am saying is that a Ram truck has no alarm and the engine often ran up to 230 without issue. Tranny once climbed over 250 outside Telluride.

Which factory are you referring? Chassis or Cummins?

Fan sounded like it always did.

I don't think that 200-205 is hot at all. My 8.3 will run about 210-220 with tranny temps staying around 200.


It wasn't the factory, my bad. It was the Cummins information line supplied by Frieghtliner. So it was Cummins.

dubdub07
Explorer
Explorer
All I am saying is that a Ram truck has no alarm and the engine often ran up to 230 without issue. Tranny once climbed over 250 outside Telluride.

Which factory are you referring? Chassis or Cummins?

Fan sounded like it always did.

I don't think that 200-205 is hot at all. My 8.3 will run about 210-220 with tranny temps staying around 200.
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et2
Explorer
Explorer
230 degrees and no alarm? Cummins told me it came on at 220. I watched the trans temp as well. It ran 8 -10 degrees cooler but at hill pulls it matched the engine at times. In the Allison manual it says 250 and the trans fluid must be changed.

I'm not understanding why the factory says it alarms at 220 and must be attended to. You're saying you exceed that by 10 degrees and it's not a problem? Is this with the fan roaring as well? Because mine did hit 210 maybe 211 and the fan quickly settled it down to under 200 . I'm just not comfortable it running at 205 most the time on a 85 degree day - no traffic - running 60 mph on the freeway.

I guess I just need to go faster :?

dubdub07
Explorer
Explorer
I have owned 3 of the Cummins 6.7s in Ram trucks and I can tell you that all of them pulling heavy (20K combined weight) the temp would routinely run into the 230 range without a light or troubles. You see where I live, so the towing I did was not flat-land straight ahead towing either.....

WW
2013 Fleetwood Discovery 40G
TOADS: 12 Jeep JKUR Wrangler, 16 Cherokee Trailhawk, 15 Grand Cherokee, 13 RAM 1500 Longhorn (not a toad) American STEEL = American profits
RET USAF MSGT (26yrs) and still DoD ATC.
DW,DS,DD in the MH w/Westley the killer PUG!

Sundance07
Explorer
Explorer
et2 wrote:
Sundance07 wrote:
The new 6.7's run hotter for a reason. It is due to the EPA mandated emissions equipment. Hotter = Cleaner


But isn't that what the after burner and DEF is for? That isn't part of the cooling system to my knowledge. I might be blowing smoke, but it concerns me I'm significantly under weight 4,000 lbs on GVWR and 6,000 on GCWR, and the engine temps are were they are. I,m concerned if I had an additional 10,000 on the engine to pull, and still within its capacity according to the manufacture, I'm going to see it way higher.


To a point, the higher temp thermostats that are now in the 6.7 increase the engine temps which effect the whole combustion process. They want a higher engine temp for a more efficient burn, reducing soot which ultimately gets to your exhaust and emissions equipment.
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et2
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Explorer
Sundance07 wrote:
The new 6.7's run hotter for a reason. It is due to the EPA mandated emissions equipment. Hotter = Cleaner


But isn't that what the after burner and DEF is for? That isn't part of the cooling system to my knowledge. I might be blowing smoke, but it concerns me I'm significantly under weight 4,000 lbs on GVWR and 6,000 on GCWR, and the engine temps are were they are. I,m concerned if I had an additional 10,000 on the engine to pull, and still within its capacity according to the manufacture, I'm going to see it way higher.

et2
Explorer
Explorer
dan-nickie wrote:
In the last couple week mine has been running 198-200 on the flats in above 90 weather.
Same engine.
Any incline and it would heat up a little until I got over the hill.


That sure looks like a Ford engine? :W
Can't compare the two.

Sundance07
Explorer
Explorer
The new 6.7's run hotter for a reason. It is due to the EPA mandated emissions equipment. Hotter = Cleaner
2012 Ram 3500 4x4 CCLB/DRW Laramie, Cummins 6.7 HO, 68RFE, 4.10 Max Tow, Firestone Ride-Rite, 50 Gal Transfer Flow
2008 Citation Supreme Platinum XL 34.5 CKTS, GVW 15500, MorRyde, 4 wh disc brakes, -30C Polar Pkg

et2
Explorer
Explorer
vanzuilekom wrote:
Hello,
I have same engine in 2008 model. On the flats at any outside temp it runs at 192-194. Climbing at 6% for 10 miles it will go to 210 and the fan kicks in and cools immediately to 195. I called Cummins and they said fan on at 210 is the spec. and 192-194 is the thermostat set point. It has been this way since day one.
Hope this helps.
Check the belt for slippage. Check the rad for dirt or obstructions. Check the coolant level and also the rad pressure cap for spring tension and seal condition.


It just turned a year old with just under 3000 miles on it. The coolant recovery bottle is within limits and the cap is checked for tightness before every trip and is fine. So hopefully the belt is tightened correctly being so new, and I really hope the radiator hasn't accumulated that much dirt as we haven't been in dusty conditions. It looks to be clean.

What are you driving and your weight? I'm at about 32,000 GCWR ( with 4,000 toad). Just wondering if a big difference in weight being moved.

And in another note that still leaves me 6,000 more lbs allowable weight I can tow within specs ( above current toad) and about 4000 more in the allowable MH GVWR. So having 6,000 more lbs hanging off the back is going to make a big difference in engine and transmission temps and additional 4,000 lbs of cargo (additional 10,000 lbs) . It just seems to be at a high temp for a light load and ambient air temps.

vanzuilekom
Explorer
Explorer
Hello,
I have same engine in 2008 model. On the flats at any outside temp it runs at 192-194. Climbing at 6% for 10 miles it will go to 210 and the fan kicks in and cools immediately to 195. I called Cummins and they said fan on at 210 is the spec. and 192-194 is the thermostat set point. It has been this way since day one.
Hope this helps.
Check the belt for slippage. Check the rad for dirt or obstructions. Check the coolant level and also the rad pressure cap for spring tension and seal condition.

ScottG
Nomad
Nomad
Your temps are completely normal and fine. Also 220 is nothing for concern.