Got a diesel truck starting problem.
The patient:
2000 F250 Superduty, 4x4
Approx 280K kms
seems like the battery(ies) doesn't have enough juice to turn it over, but only when it's below -10ish (I picked up a battery tester, but it's only good to 500CCA, and I'm concerned about what a 650 CCA battery might do to it.
I get about 2 tries out of it, then it tells me to put the battery charger on it and go back inside and consider carpooling in this weather.
when it tries to start, it's go rrrr-rrrrr-rrrrrr-rrrrr-almost catch-rrr-rrrr-rrrr
Then there's no point in trying further, because it won't catch.
the truck insists on being plugged in below about 5C (I'm told this is "just a diesel thing", but in this weather (currently somewhere around the -25C range) it doesn't like a 1 - 4 hr warm up. If I don't plug it in all night it doesn't seem to care that it's been plugged in at all. This is going to be very costly over the duration of the winter.
So,.. here's what I know:
Truck was bought from a farmer. Has been a farm truck all its life. And consequently, it's been "farmer-ized" a couple of times.
(Definition: farmer-ized: the act of jerry-rigging something to get it home, or, "just because", then never bothering to fix it properly, until it fails again, or until the item is sold, and it becomes someone else's problem.)
Truck currently has 15/40W oil in it ( I suspect that this is a HUGE no-no)
Even plugged in, it wouldn't start all last weekend (same pattern mentioned above) when it was below -30C, it would only start once the temps climbed above -15ish, then it started like it had been run all week.
Truck's air filter box has been modified to use a "big truck" filter, and has no cover and snorkel on it anymore.
The winterfront has been installed, as of this week.
Sometimes, when it fails to start, it will let out a "puff" of smoke from under the hood (close to the turbo area)
Sometimes, especially when it's cold ( the truck, not necessarily just the air), I can smell diesel when I get on the throttle.
I keep yelling "sell it" and booting it in the tires. This doesn't seem to be fixing the problem.
(I'm getting tired of my Ford being a true "Fix or Repair Daily", and it's been nickel and diming us since we got it in July.)
Anyone have any suggestions on how to make my "winter vehicle" work in the winter?