Diesel wrote:First off, according to marks link I have an incomplete recall for the injection pump! Sweeeet...if this one dies I have a free replacement on deck.
Second, runaways caused by oil being fed to the engine through the turbo cannot be shut off with the key. Runaways caused by the injection pump might be stoppable with a key if the shutoff pieces didn't get disturbed by whatever caused the runaway.
First off, don't wait on the recall, there is a REASON it's called a "Safety Recall".
This late in the game, Chrysler probably doesn't have the new pumps to satisfy the recall, so you'll likely get a re-man pump, possibly even from a general rebuilder.
Do you realize how truly hard engine oil is to burn in a diesel at normal temps?
Most runaways that happen are due to turbo failure which are at higher temps, where the oil will burn in the cylinder and on a stock engine the destruction isn't usually because of RPMs, but because of oil starvation to the crankshaft, or because a valve got broken due to contact.
An engine can run for many minutes with a leaking turbo and not "come apart", the real damage is done because of lack of lubrication.
Also, in my more recent experience, just because an engine has blow by and burns oil (denoted by a baby-blue hue to the smoke), does not guarantee runaway, either.
I drove a severely worn out 1996 P-pump engine home numerous weeks back, when going down a long grade it would oil smoke horribly when I got onto the fuel, which indicates the engine had oil laying in the cooler and intake, which was blown in by boost.
I was working the engine, since I was also towing a vehicle.
Not even one hint of runaway.
Mark.