Common rail conversion using duramax parts

NyCowboy87

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Straight from ppl rule book, it's rather gray but I've already had one tech official say no to a p pumped 7.3 in 2.6.
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There is no reason you can't run a p-pump according to the rules. I does not state any where "no p-pump on a non factory p-pump equipped engine". There has been others run a p-pump in 2.6...
 

NyCowboy87

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I agree with you both, but like I said earlier I've already been told no. So what's the next step? Do I build it then protest the rule if and when they say no?


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Hotrodtractor

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I agree with you both, but like I said earlier I've already been told no. So what's the next step? Do I build it then protest the rule if and when they say no?


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Call Johnathan Mears 502-817-7494. He is the Tech director for PPL.

When we had this discussion here in the COTPC - we determined that we would let it run if someone built it. The rule does not in any way prohibit the construction of such a setup for that particular class. Our wording is identical.
 
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I wouldn't be afraid. They can't change the rules that are already written. Heel there was a duramax truck with a belt driven p-pump on the passenger side of its cummins at scheids this year. If it's legal fuel system for a cummins then it's legal for all makes.
 

NyCowboy87

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Call Johnathan Mears 502-817-7494. He is the Tech director for PPL.



When we had this discussion here in the COTPC - we determined that we would let it run if someone built it. The rule does not in any way prohibit the construction of such a setup for that particular class. Our wording is identical.


Thanks Jason, just talked to him and p pump is a go for a 7.3. He said they changed it for this year.


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NyCowboy87

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My understanding is that a good ported 7.3 head flows about the same as a ported 12v cummins head.


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Yes the 7.3 heads can actually be made flow very well. Over 200cfms at 0.500 valve lift very close to the flow of 12v heads. If I where building a 2.6 truck I would machine the plenum runners from the head and fabricate runner intakes that direct straight to the ports this would help the flow a great deal more. The main restriction on the intake ports is the #2&7 I believe where the casting makes the port very long and narrow the other ports could be ported more but it is best to be flow matched.
 
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Yes the 7.3 heads can actually be made flow very well. Over 200cfms at 0.500 valve lift very close to the flow of 12v heads. If I where building a 2.6 truck I would machine the plenum runners from the head and fabricate runner intakes that direct straight to the ports this would help the flow a great deal more. The main restriction on the intake ports is the #2&7 I believe where the casting makes the port very long and narrow the other ports could be ported more but it is best to be flow matched.


We did a 12v head here that flows right at 300cfm at 600ish lift.....

200 cfm is no better than a 6.4 head and it is feeding a lot less cubes.. remember on a turbo limited, fuel only class, feeding big displacement is not an advantage...

Been proven time and time again in 2.6 that big displacement cummins and stroker duramax's do not make hardly anymore power than their smaller displacement original versions. Without larger turbos and more air, your just wasting efficiency and money.

A big bore de-stroked 7.3 with 300 cfm heads @ about 6.0-6.5 liters displacement would be an animal. But then your right back at just using a 6.4 to begin with being cheaper and easier.

The whole "no-replacement for displacement" is a foolish thing to say when your running a turbo. Especially in an inducer limited fuel only class. It's all about efficiency of the engine for the size/flow of the turbo your allowed to run.
 

superpsd

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It would be nice to have a common rail 7.3 but a built 6.4 or 6.7 would likely be heckuva lot easier and cheaper.
 

PsdPullerJr

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What about sleeving and running a smaller piston? I've thought about that for a few years now. Would take the displacement out and I thought longer rods helped on the torque side of things. As you said, I've felt for several years that the 7.3 was at a disadvantage having the bigger cubes. After seeing what you've done with a 6.4 and with swamps putting one in 99-03 chassis, that's gonna be my new play engine. After this year I'm done wasting money on something that can't compete in work stock. It's making me wonder about a p pumped 7.3 or a 6.4, which would be the best bang for the buck.
 
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Best bang for the buck is a commonrail 6.4.

By putting a smaller bore in a 7.3 you would be doing the opposite of what you should be. You want larger bore Dia. Stroke is not gonna help the high rpm/hp that is needed for competition use in fact stroke is kind of the enemy. Destroking a crank would be much cheaper than sleeving 8 cylinders. Just need a longer rod for less stroke.
 

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