View Full Version : Good News from Bullydog
hobbz
04-02-2007, 05:08 PM
I emailed Bullydog asking about the programmer for the 6.7's. They emailed me back saying that they expect it to be on the market in about a month.
Enclosed is a copy of the reply:
They are in testing now. They should be out in a month or so.
Thanks
Jason Murdock
Technician
Bully Dog Technologies
www.bullydog.com (http://www.bullydog.com)
888-285-5936 ext 127
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> Comments: When Do You Expect To Come Out With The Programmer For The
2007 6.7 Cummins?thanks
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supercharged_hp
04-02-2007, 05:44 PM
Sweet!
I wonder what their DPF solution is?
hobbz
04-02-2007, 06:13 PM
i also emailed superchips and they said that they are working on one, but it will be a while.
jgiachino
04-02-2007, 10:17 PM
Sweet!
I wonder what their DPF solution is?
That's what i'd be concerned about...how does it play with all the new exciting emissions stuff...they'll eventually figure it all out....but how could they have done so and tested enough in such a short time???
dodgeboy59td
04-03-2007, 06:00 AM
I got one from them beta testing, for my dads cab and chassis and its great!!!!!!!!!! Wes
I got one from them beta testing, for my dads cab and chassis and its great!!!!!!!!!! Wes
So Wes, what's it like when that DPF cleans itself of all that soot that ANY good power adder would have to add(even w/ VGT)?
dodgeboy59td
04-03-2007, 07:59 AM
I havent even noticed it cleaning itself, my dad drives it mostly and he said that its not noticable when it cleans itself. We did get a letter from bullydog saying that it may reduce the life of the DPF. Dont know how much though? Wes
AHHHHH, That is their ticket out of being responsible for your DPF taking a dump prematurely. I would run IMO.
Pooter
04-03-2007, 09:18 AM
If you can eliminate any engine light you might get, hack that dpf off with a quickness!
Armapoc
04-03-2007, 09:18 AM
AHHHHH, That is their ticket out of being responsible for your DPF taking a dump prematurely. I would run IMO.
What kind of "solution" are you looking for. If you put extra fuel into the system it will burn off more often. Thats the solution.....
The one method to make more power with less soot is Timing, I'm sure some of that power's coming from that.
I wouldn't think Bully Dog would pioneer an aftermarket method of burning off the DPF would you? The truck will know when it needs it, and if it hasn't burnt off already then it hasn't needed it. The other symptom of the truck NOT burning off at this point would be a lot of pain and cost.
If this guy hasn't seen a check engine light yet the truck is probably handling the extra fuel/Timing.[guitar]
In stock form these trucks burn super clean and the DPF still has to regenerate often. Unless BD is using a different technology from everything they've done in the past, I can't see the DPF being able to keep up w/ any kind of life span. Obviously they feel the same if they're sending you a letter stating the DPF life may be reduced. If you've kept up w/ the 6.7L Bully Dog truck C&C they converted, they have already had problems w/ that truck and it's emission components. I guess time will tell w/ these DPFs on modded trucks.
Bud Kunz
04-03-2007, 12:35 PM
In stock form these trucks burn super clean and the DPF still has to regenerate often. Unless BD is using a different technology from everything they've done in the past, I can't see the DPF being able to keep up w/ any kind of life span. Obviously they feel the same if they're sending you a letter stating the DPF life may be reduced. If you've kept up w/ the 6.7L Bully Dog truck C&C they converted, they have already had problems w/ that truck and it's emission components. I guess time will tell w/ these DPFs on modded trucks.
I am the engineer in charge of the programming on the 6.7L at Bully Dog. Let me assure you that the above statement is not true. Regardless of what rumors you have heard our 6.7L does not, and has not had DPF Problems. I wrote the letter to Wes about the DPF because we are still testing, and until we test completely we are not positive of the effects on the DPF. That is what testing is for, and that is what we are doing.
Armapoc is right the DPF senses when it needs to do a burn off and when it does it will alert you on the overhead computer. However, because of the way the system is set up it will only do the burn off at highway speeds. So even on a stock truck you can set DPF lights if you ignore the overhead and continue in town stop and start driving. At that point you have to go to the dealer and have them set it for manual burn off with the star scan and then go drive at highway speeds for 45 to 50 minutes so it can complete the burn off. I am currently in the process of adding the manual burn off feature to the programming so if you need to do this you can do it without going to the dealership.
I can tell you that testing is going well and we do hope to release by next month, but only if we are satisfied with the test results.
qzilla
04-03-2007, 01:23 PM
I am the engineer in charge of the programming on the 6.7L at Bully Dog. Let me assure you that the above statement is not true. Regardless of what rumors you have heard our 6.7L does not, and has not had DPF Problems. I wrote the letter to Wes about the DPF because we are still testing, and until we test completely we are not positive of the effects on the DPF. That is what testing is for, and that is what we are doing.
Armapoc is right the DPF senses when it needs to do a burn off and when it does it will alert you on the overhead computer. However, because of the way the system is set up it will only do the burn off at highway speeds. So even on a stock truck you can set DPF lights if you ignore the overhead and continue in town stop and start driving. At that point you have to go to the dealer and have them set it for manual burn off with the star scan and then go drive at highway speeds for 45 to 50 minutes so it can complete the burn off. I am currently in the process of adding the manual burn off feature to the programming so if you need to do this you can do it without going to the dealership.
I can tell you that testing is going well and we do hope to release by next month, but only if we are satisfied with the test results.
That is all a bunch of bologna.
The DPF regenerates often, especially if you have a load. If you have any equipment hooked up to it is then it is plain to see. For that matter you can see it on a simple EGT gauge. If you run low sulfer diesel in them they regenerate a tremendous amount. And yes we tested it to see what happens.
The 6.7 runs extremely hot in normal driving conditions, like 1000-1100 degrees cruising empty at the speed limits. This is to help keep the particulate matter down so the filter does not get clogged up. When it regenerates we have recorded temperatures in the 1400+ degree range.
I can also tell you that if too much soot or particulate matter gets to the filter before the filter is at its operating temperature then you can glaze the filter to a point that it cannot burn off. This is not just true on the Dodge trucks but, all the DPF systems I am aware of including the big truck systems.
Soot and extra fuel will kill the DPF, I promise you.
I am not hear to argue about how to make power or what will and won't work but, please spare these people the non sense about the DPF stuff. They are expensive and people need to know that at this time it is pretty easy to ruin them.
supercharged_hp
04-03-2007, 02:29 PM
I guess time will tell, but I hope that BD, Quad, Smarty and the rest can disable the DPF testing somehow. I've read that there's an EGT and pressure sensor both in front of and behind the cat/DPF unit (apparently the Ford only uses EGT front and back, not sure about GM).
Alberta doesn't have emission testing and, frankly, mine would probably fall off and I'd forget to replace it if I knew it would allow me to throw soot without damaging it. Either that or rig up a bypass system using two 4" electric cutouts [whistle]
Armapoc
04-03-2007, 02:36 PM
What I was saying is that there are other ways to make power than creating soot. You can get a good boost in power, and make the DPF cleaner with the right tuning. I know these trucks aren't "super clean" and they haven't been for a couple years. Why would you need a DPF if they were?
If these trucks were really that clean and efficient wouldn't we be seeing better mileage stock than what some tuning can accomplish. EPA has crippled the mileage on what these trucks can do, and that makes the Particulate filters clog up even faster.
My bet is there will be some tuning that actually lengthens the life of the DPF. Cleaner burn in the cylinder means less soot overall in the exhaust stream.
qzilla
04-03-2007, 02:36 PM
The Cummins DPF system consists of 3 egt probes, 2 - Oxygen sensors and a differential pressure sensor.
Ford uses 3 egt probes, and a differential pressure sensor
GM uses 2 egt probes and a differential pressure sensor.
qzilla
04-03-2007, 02:44 PM
What I was saying is that there are other ways to make power than creating soot. You can get a good boost in power, and make the DPF cleaner with the right tuning. I know these trucks aren't "super clean" and they haven't been for a couple years. Why would you need a DPF if they were?
If these trucks were really that clean and efficient wouldn't we be seeing better mileage stock than what some tuning can accomplish. EPA has crippled the mileage on what these trucks can do, and that makes the Particulate filters clog up even faster.
My bet is there will be some tuning that actually lengthens the life of the DPF. Cleaner burn in the cylinder means less soot overall in the exhaust stream.
The problem is that the EPA definition of clean is goofy. It is not about how efficient the motor is it is all about the NOX emissions. The DPF actually makes the air exiting the tailpipe cleaner than the air entering the motor.
At 2 microns the thing is crazy.
The fuel milage suffers not just because of the emissions equipment. Realize that these trucks are making more and more power which requires more and more fuel. Sure there are little things you can do and might be able to do that will not affect the DPF but, if you are going to make very much power at all then it is going to kill the DPF. I think the DPF is about at its limit as it sits.
I am not talking about 20-40hp I am talking about 100hp gain or more. These motors are plenty capable of considerably more power but, a lot is going to have to change in order to make it reliable and simple enough for people to want to mess with it.
I am yet to EVER see any tuning that would make emissions less or particulate matter less and still make any power at all. Now that is not to say the tuning is not significantly more efficient in the motor, I believe that happens a lot. It just would not pass the EPA's standards for a vehicle manufacturer.
Fact #1 Timing dramatically increases NOX emissions and particulate matter.
Fact #2 Fuel without timing is not efficient although it can be compensated some with atomization which is why the Rail system has yet been bumped again. That is why the fuel mileage is suffering.
supercharged_hp
04-03-2007, 02:45 PM
So does Quad think there's any chance that there will be a fix to this DPF b.s. in the future? Even if it was for "offroad use only"?
If things are looking grim, I'd probably keep the 06 for good and maybe try to find another one... It's just a shame that as soon as we get the transmission that everyone's been hoping for and the extra displacement, we end up with this nightmare.
Armapoc
04-03-2007, 02:48 PM
I completely agree with you Quad, except for the particulate matter part. Why does increasing timing increase particulate. Wouldn't the timing allow the particulate to burn more completely?
qzilla
04-03-2007, 03:09 PM
Well, you can't think of particulate matter as soley soot. There are a lot of things they are trying to stop which is why they went to a 2 micron filter. The EPA's high horse is NOX emissions and the CAT along with the DPF is said to lower NOX emissions a tremendous amount.
So you can either back off the fuel and loose power or you can do things to compensate. First thing that happened is they went with more displacement because they get bigger breaks with bigger engines. A 350hp 6.7L engine is allowed a considerable amount more "particulate matter" than a 325hp 5.9L engine. This is also why Ford went with a 6.4L. I am not sure exactly where the line is but, evidentally it is for engines larger than 6.0L's.
The second thing they did was increase injetion pressure. Now that sounds straight forward but, its not at all. Sure they raised the rail pressure but, they also added more injections per combustion. These are shorter injections so the average pressure of the injection overall is much higher.
There is a lot of goofy stuff. I think we will all be able to have fun with these trucks, get our mileage back and they will be just fine. Actually the tools we have to work with are only getting better. The only downside is that they are also getting more complex which scares the dickins out of people.
Now, my biggest beef right now is telling people that their $3k-$5k filter is going to be ok. No one knows that right now. If we know anything we know it clogs easy and its expensive. We know the motor itself is dirty enough that it needs to regenerate quite often and that the more regenerations it has the shorter the lifespan of the filter. SOrt of like your air filter. The more you clean it and the longer you clean it the more wear it gets.
What I was saying is that there are other ways to make power than creating soot. You can get a good boost in power, and make the DPF cleaner with the right tuning. I know these trucks aren't "super clean" and they haven't been for a couple years. Why would you need a DPF if they were?
If these trucks were really that clean and efficient wouldn't we be seeing better mileage stock than what some tuning can accomplish. EPA has crippled the mileage on what these trucks can do, and that makes the Particulate filters clog up even faster.
My bet is there will be some tuning that actually lengthens the life of the DPF. Cleaner burn in the cylinder means less soot overall in the exhaust stream.
WHen I said "super clean" I meant after the DPF does it's job. Have you noticed the tailpipe of an 2007 6.7L? They're not full of soot after running down the street anymore.
Spooler
04-03-2007, 03:53 PM
Run Forest RUN!!!!!!!!!
They need more time I think. Give them six more months of testing and they will be even better.
dodgeboy59td
04-04-2007, 05:41 AM
Well we have a commander installed on the 6.7L with only EGT probe hooked up and this truck does not run very hot at all, even with the programmer on the middle stage it will barely hit 1000 *F I have never seen nothing on the overhead computer about burning off. The Bullydog downloader is going to be a great product, we havent had one flaw or engine light with it. Wes
qzilla
04-04-2007, 01:21 PM
I think peak on a stock truck they will only hit around 1200 degrees loaded. The problem is that they run nearly that hot cruising 70-75mph.
The reason for this lies in the VGT control. When cruising even at those speeds the truck is only making 2-4psi of boost and many times it is making 0 boost. This causes it to run very hot for cruising. Once you lay into the skinny pedal then the bosot jumps and the egt's stabilize without ever rising much at all!
The hottest I have seen was pulling a load. Now I was going up a pretty good hill and they peaked at around 1200 degrees or within a few degrees of that. Once I went over the hill and eased off the throttle they jumped UP another 100-120 degrees until I hit flat ground and started making more boost.
These are really strange animals!
Also, you can hook your boost up and it reads within 1psi up to about 24psi by selecting 04.5-07 Dodge. The coolant is within about 8 degrees as well if you wanted to go ahead and hook them up. We are working to finish the update right now and it will be out soon.
We will also have the fuel pressure kit and transmissions temp adapters here very soon as well!
Quad
duddin10
04-04-2007, 07:19 PM
i also emailed superchips and they said that they are working on one, but it will be a while.
Alas, the great Superchips. They were supposed to have had a file update (after the original shorted out the computer and alternator) for my dads 2007 5.9L in 7-10 days and they would send an email notification when it was completed. Lets see that was a month ago now and still nothing. I wouldn't hold my breath on anything from superchips.
Bud Kunz
04-05-2007, 08:06 AM
Now, my biggest beef right now is telling people that their $3k-$5k filter is going to be ok. No one knows that right now. If we know anything we know it clogs easy and its expensive. We know the motor itself is dirty enough that it needs to regenerate quite often and that the more regenerations it has the shorter the lifespan of the filter. SOrt of like your air filter. The more you clean it and the longer you clean it the more wear it gets.
All I said is we are testing, just like you are testing. We do not intend to give people a false sense of security on this issue. Remember I am the one who wrote the letter to wes telling him we were not sure of the implications on the DPF. We currently offer tuning on 5.9L Truck that can destroy a stock transmission, but we warn our customers ahead of time. I certainly did not mean to mislead anyone.
Frankly, it suprises me that quad is so sure that a product that is not his, and he has not even seen, will do this or do that. Not trying to start a war here Quad, but I think your the one who is trying to mislead people about our product.
qzilla
04-05-2007, 10:26 AM
I say you should start shipping them then. They work right. They don't hurt the DPF, you and 3 other people told me that, so start shipping.
I think it shows how much you care about customers when you use their trucks for the testing? Are you going to replace all the dpf's if you destroy them?
Now, you say you don't know what the real result will be, and that is 100% respectable. But, your beta testers have to be scared to death. You don't know how it affects the 2nd or 3rd most expensive part on the truck.
I am not sure what any product will do. I have access to some engineers that have been involved in DPF development. I simply understand how they work and what they do. Not in a round about way. I am not misleading anyone about any products. If I have to err to the side of caution slightly I will but, my money is that there are some dpf's out there dying as we speak.
Oh and for the record, I never mentioned my product. I never have even been so bold to to say or think that we will be able to make something that is "safe" for these trucks. These trucks are new and people do not need a BS story about things that have not been fully tested.
Armapoc
04-05-2007, 11:05 AM
Wow, so are you not going to release a product for these Quad?
iker42
04-05-2007, 11:23 AM
Wow, so are you not going to release a product for these Quad?
I think he will. but quads smart, wait awile, let the bugs get tested out by company owned trucks, then beta test them, then sell them. I've heard very few problems with quads products and even edge's products because they test sooo much before ever letting them test out to potential customers
Armapoc
04-05-2007, 11:34 AM
by company owned trucks, then beta test them
I'm pretty sure most companies have "Company Owned Trucks". Everyone here has seen the tuned up truck at SEMA. It was a 6.7L and that was in November
Fisherguy
04-05-2007, 09:06 PM
Okay, stupid question, what's a DPF? [duhhh]
vzdude
04-05-2007, 09:27 PM
Diesel Particulate Filter ( kind of like a catalytic converter for diesels)
qzilla
04-05-2007, 09:35 PM
Not really a converter. It is an actual high temp 2 micron filter that sits downstream of an actual catlytic converter.
Fisherguy
04-05-2007, 09:45 PM
THanks.
The new Powerjokes, Gm's have them too?
qzilla
04-05-2007, 10:10 PM
Uh huh! Unfortunately!
vzdude
04-06-2007, 06:34 AM
qzilla, does it still "burn" off like the cat does? Using a catalyst to create heat to get rid of the particles? I know the talk about it regenerating? Adding fuel to make it "burn" if I understand it correctly. By the way, I would love to test anything you have! ( I know that is a whole different post, sorry! )Truck is still pretty stock, but wanting to play! Drive a LOT of miles every year, soooooo? Hook me up!
qzilla
04-06-2007, 02:14 PM
Well the CAT does not really need to burn off.
What a cat does is heat the exhaust so that it reduces the particles. Now that is simply not enough for the emissions requirements so they added a very fancy filter behind the cat. The problem with any filter is that they finally get clogged up or less efficient. The only way to clean the DPF is through heat and that is what the regeneration is for.
Fisherguy
04-06-2007, 02:19 PM
What's one of these things look like?
Snojumper
04-06-2007, 02:56 PM
I LOVE IT!!!
Someone throwing the BS flag on Bully Dog! [dummy]
boy I could tell you stories........................
Fisherguy
04-06-2007, 06:44 PM
I don't know what everyone has against Bully Dog, I've had no problems at all. People complain about customer service, I call and am talking to a guy who seems to know what he;s talkin about in no time, very helpful...
BTW, 2.3.9 will be out soon and it will have a fix for the daytime running lights.
Coming soon being able to adjust for tire size, cool! [coffee]
(yah I know, just like a Smarty)
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