A diesel can barely warm it's self up just by idling. Most of that cold outside air drawn into the engine doesn't participate in combustion. The extra air just absorbs the little bit of heat from the tiny amount of fuel a diesel injects at idle. And the extra air just carries the heat up the exhaust stack. The engine metal has very little heat remaining to absorb warmth from. Pre-heat the coolant and oil with electrics.When the engine starts the temp gauge will likely read somewhere above the bottom indication. Once the engine starts and has oil pressure for a minute. Begin using the engine at 1/2 load until warmed up.
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Today's Featured Article - Uncle Cecil's Super A Lives Again - by Mike Purcell. A week or so out of most of my childhood summers was often spent with my Uncle Cecil and Aunt Sissie in the small East Texas town of Maydelle on their 80 acre farm. Some of my fondest memories of these visits are those of learning to drive a tractor at the helm of Uncle Cecil’s 1948 Farmall Super A. Uncle Cecil was the second owner of this wonderful little tractor, but it was almost as though he had adopted an infant. The original owner was a man from Minnesota who bought her from a local dea
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