- Posts
- 166
- Location
- N. Yorkshire
Hi All,
With the recent cold weather, starting from cold has taken a bit longer than normal. About 4-5 scenes of cranking. It’s never not started and starts perfectly on subsequent starts. After reading various freds on trouble starting from cold I wondered if the glow plugs cold be an issue or part of an issue. Bearing mind I’ve recently replaced all the fluids and associated filters together with air, fuel, OCC, turbo solenoid filters they shouldn’t be the cause. Is it just ‘normal’ for such low temperatures (down to -7 some nights)?
To test the glow plugs, I thought about buying a Sealey TA125 current tester so I could do them individually in situ, before battling to get that out if dodgy.
What I’m a bit confused about is there is a YT video about FL1 glow plug testing that said the resistance of each was around 0.2 Ohms. By my calculations that’s 60A each (12v/0.2ohm), being connected in parallel would be 240A being drawn prior to ignition. The fuse is a 100A so something seems wrong.
Your views/ opinions on this would be appreciated.
Regards,
M.
With the recent cold weather, starting from cold has taken a bit longer than normal. About 4-5 scenes of cranking. It’s never not started and starts perfectly on subsequent starts. After reading various freds on trouble starting from cold I wondered if the glow plugs cold be an issue or part of an issue. Bearing mind I’ve recently replaced all the fluids and associated filters together with air, fuel, OCC, turbo solenoid filters they shouldn’t be the cause. Is it just ‘normal’ for such low temperatures (down to -7 some nights)?
To test the glow plugs, I thought about buying a Sealey TA125 current tester so I could do them individually in situ, before battling to get that out if dodgy.
What I’m a bit confused about is there is a YT video about FL1 glow plug testing that said the resistance of each was around 0.2 Ohms. By my calculations that’s 60A each (12v/0.2ohm), being connected in parallel would be 240A being drawn prior to ignition. The fuse is a 100A so something seems wrong.
Your views/ opinions on this would be appreciated.
Regards,
M.