blk350on20s
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I am astonished you guys are still helping. More patience than i have.
I am astonished you guys are still helping. More patience than i have.
OK. Is there a reason WD-40 wouldn't work, in the same situation, with ~equal results? Again, just curious and trying to learn. It seems that ether would fire under less ideal situations than WD-40, making diagnosis somewhat more difficult.The only real time ether is highly dangerous is when the gp's are firing off, superheating the ether and making it potentially fire off before tdc, resulting in busted rods and cranks. If you dont have a heat source activated, ether is "ok" to use for diagnostic purposes. wd40 is a great option too and far safer.
The purpose of the ether in this situation is to see if the truck will even ATTEMPT to fire off when giving it a known-good fuel source. IF the truck doesn't have fubared internals, it SHOULD try to fire and run on that ether for a second. Thats the ONLY thing we're trying to find out is if its an electrical issue, fueling issue, or major internal/compression issue.
Lots of OTR and heavy-duty/construction trucks came stock with, or at least optioned out an ether-injection system.
And what is different in that? Just asking because it worked for me when I needed it and was afraid to use ether. Is it the amount of WD-40 or just that it's different than ether?WD 40 only works because your lighting the propellant in the wd 40...
And what is different in that? Just asking because it worked for me when I needed it and was afraid to use ether. Is it the amount of WD-40 or just that it's different than ether?
Interesting. I never considered not removing the air filter.Ether is a fuel, WD40 is not. I've used it too before, but it takes a TON more then ether and you have to remove the air filter, otherwise you just have a drippy filter.
OK. Is there a reason WD-40 wouldn't work, in the same situation, with ~equal results? Again, just curious and trying to learn. It seems that ether would fire under less ideal situations than WD-40, making diagnosis somewhat more difficult.
Ether is a fuel, WD40 is not. I've used it too before, but it takes a TON more then ether and you have to remove the air filter, otherwise you just have a drippy filter.
I was looking for a video to show the quantity that can be injected with a quality ether without hurting an engine.
Here you go. And it's no coincidence that the can in his hand looks exactly like the one above...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohA4QAVSZlw