B2620 temp guage

mike paulson

Member
Jan 11, 2012
229
24
18
ulster, NY
Temps around upstate NY we're close to zero yesterday morning and I was moving firewood with my B2620 and happened to notice my temp gauge reading lower than normal Anyone else who lives in a frozen Tundra like I do experiencing the same thing?
 

Stmar

Active member

Equipment
B2650HSDC
May 23, 2017
929
47
28
Buffalo, Wyoming
Normal running temp for summer is 3 bars but in cold weather it is usually one bar and it takes a while to get there.
 

07wingnut

Active member
Lifetime Member
Feb 13, 2016
254
98
28
Clearwater, BC, CA
Personally, I really don't like diesels running cold and one way of preventing this is to partially block the radiator air flow. This is what works well for me. Just zip tie the thin plywood to the screen for the winter and remove once it gets looking like winter is on the way out. Make sure you have a temperature gauge to keep track of the engine temperature.
The BX23 runs a little under half scale when snow blowing in cold weather.
 

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JerryMT

Active member

Equipment
Kubota M4500, NH TD95D,Ford 4610
Jun 17, 2017
528
156
43
The Palouse - North Idaho
Temps around upstate NY we're close to zero yesterday morning and I was moving firewood with my B2620 and happened to notice my temp gauge reading lower than normal Anyone else who lives in a frozen Tundra like I do experiencing the same thing?
You're not working it hard. Unlike a spark ignition engine whose peak gas temperature remains nearly constant, a diesel doesn't hit it's peak gas temperature until it's at max power. So running around 10% max output at really cold temperatures isn't gonna' give you a fast warm up.