I'll vouch for it being cold up dare, ya! My alternator went out at 02:30 in the A.M. Wednesday. I made it to the truck stop in Pembina, ND just south of the border. -33 degrees. I swapped out the starter battery with one of my deep cycles to confirm it was the alternator and not a frozen battery. Not much fun working with those small bolts that come on side post terminal batteries. Had to take my gloves off to thread the bolts all while fighting stiff battery cables. Jack London would have been proud of me though. I didn't need to kill any dogs. Sat in back and warmed my hands over my Mr. Heater buddy dude.
There were frozen trucks all up and down I-29 and on 75 from the border to Winnipeg. Many were Canadian or Northern U.S. based. It wasn't just Hinos freezing. It was brutally cold!!!!
Always carry spare fuel filters. If you don't have a way to manually prime the filters before starting the engine then carry a gallon of fuel. Also have plenty of Power Service or other additive.
The wrecker driver (owner) topped off the tanks of his flatbed T-300, Cummins powered with #1 fuel. He estimated the fuel in the tanks to now be about 70/30. With the 70% being #1. Not great for fuel economy but it keeps the engine running.
There were frozen trucks all up and down I-29 and on 75 from the border to Winnipeg. Many were Canadian or Northern U.S. based. It wasn't just Hinos freezing. It was brutally cold!!!!
Always carry spare fuel filters. If you don't have a way to manually prime the filters before starting the engine then carry a gallon of fuel. Also have plenty of Power Service or other additive.
The wrecker driver (owner) topped off the tanks of his flatbed T-300, Cummins powered with #1 fuel. He estimated the fuel in the tanks to now be about 70/30. With the 70% being #1. Not great for fuel economy but it keeps the engine running.