psduser1
Well-known member
No, the computer doesn't compensate for "extra" fuel.Yea, theres no haze at all, even at startup now that I'm at sea level and warm climate. I have Swamps 170/30's with about 100k on them, I think, I left the service records in CO so cant check. Truck is at 187k currently. I just don't see any indicators that there's an injector problem.
Here's a question, can/does the computer compensate for the extra "fuel" from all that oil? By that I mean would it adjust how much fuel is being injected thus preventing a haze from the extra oil coming in the intake?
Dont be shy, 300/200s, and compounds.Not that I've noticed. In 10 years of working on these engines, I've only ran into it a handful of times. Like was mentioned previously, I would think it would be leaving a nice blue trail of smoke if it was the turbo. The thing about the injectors issue that I find the most strange, is they act almost perfectly normal. No weird smoke, start fine and look good on a scanner. Its very strange, and if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes on several different occasions, I wouldn't believe it myself. I wish I had a better understanding of the inner workings of the injectors to help understand how this can happen. Better just be safe and swap in some 250/200s and an S468 T4 kit to be safe, its the only way to really know for sure.
No really, that would be a snotty tow rig, lol.
All bs aside, I've ran a 38r with 100% nozzles for several years-around 200k miles on two trucks, and while the garret charger is an excellent setup, there is definitely room for improvement, and kc offers that. How well it actually does, no idea. For the money, itll be my next try, since the truck it's going on is a dedicated tow rig.
Your 7.3 doesn't have an O2 sensor like a gas engine, so no way to monitor mixture much less a way to compensate it. Diesels are not as mixture sensitive as gas engines, so the PCM injects (this much) fuel following (these) parameters.
As above. The computer gives no f**** about the tailpipe.