As a truck mechanic I worked on quite a few of these engines in the 70s, didnt matter if you were going 2 mph or a hundred they literall screamed and the oil oh the oil they leaked like a sieve. good memories
I know it’s not funny when they run away, well it can be. I fired up a 12V149 gen set and she took off, I was ready for it on the flapper. But have you ever seen a man try to run through a F¥cking wall ? 😂
I have taken care of a 8v71 for the last 20 years at a dairy that I have done the mantance work for. It was a outdated hospital genset. Right now it has about 650 hours of total run time. Was a indoor/ marine unit didn't have a air filter just a screen over the intake to keep your fingers out of. Only gets run approx 1-2 hours a month. Don't leak any oil, temp has stayed at operating temp for 20 years. Ready to go on line any time. Only trouble is now it's too small.
Keep in mind it's not under load. Additionally with a super charger properly adjusting fueling on a mechanical pump would be much easier as it has a predictable charge pressure.
Best diesel ever made. Used in everything from WW2 landing craft to bulldozers, fishing boats, fire trucks and farm tractors. Won our war, grew and transported our food, fought our fires, built our infrastructure, caight our fish, you name it. That sweet GM music was the soundtrack to our cityscapes, waterfronts and construction sites.
@@Themossman9The 2 or maybe the 3 cylinder version might fit. There were also choices of cylinder displacement, IIRC there was a 52 in³ per cylinder displacement version.
Don't forget that nearly every small ( two stand) drilling rig had 6-71 pairs driving the draw works and and mud pump. When pulling pipe they would run flat against the governor for about 30 seconds, then idle for about 30 seconds. They would do this for hours on end, then while drilling they would run flat out for hours driving the rotary table. If they were lucky every few years they got a "Kerosene overhaul" The oil was drained and the sludge washed out of the crankcase with kerosene, then new oil and back to work. They were available from an army surplus for $550 each, or a joined pair with torque convertor for Can$1000. These were often brand new in original crates. A great engine , but the noise was enough to drive you to distraction!
I drove an Attack Troop Carrier with two Grey Marine 671's in Vietnam. It was a converted WWII LCM where you had to handle 25 tons deftly using two D-handle four-foot joysticks. I would twist for power on each engine and shift forward or backward for differential thrust. You could pivot the beast very gracefully when needed. Like coming into a pier against a strong current. Many a night sleeping next to them while the night watch drove going up rivers and canals through the jungle. The 671 sound and smell is still hammered into my night memories. I remember dreaming about home then waking up to the nightmare - just the opposite of normal life.
My great-grandfather helped me build my first truck at seventeen! It was a long frame IHC Emeryville grain truck. We took off the bed and cylinder, deleted the wet line, and went to work. Oversized radiator, DDTT 12V 53, and 15 Speed in front of tandem 3.90 differentials. I pulled b-trains with it. 💯💯💯💯💯💯
@@jtamsett probably but at any given rpm it already fires 2x as much then a 4stroke diesel. Then there is also the speed at which a diesel-air mixture can burn. This is a limiting factor. The speed at which the fuel can get delivered is a 2nd limiting factor. I don't think we will ever see a diesel engine doing 10000rpm.
Back in the mid 80's when I went to diesel school, the class of 12 split up in pairs and our class project was to completely tear down a 6-71, including the rack, reassemble it, and start it up on the stand. Since there was no oil or water in it, no exhaust system, and an open blower without the air box and trip plate, we were only suppose to run it just long enough to idle it and verify the rack was properly adjusted. About a minute. The teacher had made a steel plate with a handle welded to it to slam onto the blower in the event of a run-away to shut the air off. We got to the last motor when the shop phone ran and the teacher handed the plate to another student so he could answer it. The last two guys started their motor and the rack immediately went to full fuel. The guy with the plate dropped it and ran like he'd been shot! That motor ran for about 45 seconds before before we could get it shut down! You should hear what a 6-71 sounds like turning about 5 grand with no exhaust and an open blower! Yes, we all went home with stained underwear!
Drove one of those screamers with a 13 speed for 12 years starting in 1971 . Hauled gasoline around western Pennsylvania , Ohio and NY. Exhaust had a 90 degree elbow just outside the passenger window and what a roar , loved it !!!
I had a buddy with an old Jimmy with the 8V-71 in it. He pulled a grain wagon and hauled corn and beans to the river from the farm. Another friend had a cab over Jimmy with the 6-71. He hauled scrap steel to a mill. It was always fun to ride along with either of them. Those motors sure loved to sing.
Growing up in Ca.in the 60's, we lived near the Cajon Pass and would hear those trucks going up and down the pass day and night. The sounds were incredible.
I can remember as a kid sitting on the engine hatch of fishing boat going out San Francisco bay with screaming Jimmy, at full scream. 40 years ago still can hear it today.
@@willmetz1490 Pretty sure the Muni Rwy ran them. I lived in SF for 20 years. That sound and the smell of baking bread and roasting coffee down at Hill's Brothers.
I had twin 8v53 Detroit's in my Chris craft. It redlined at 2850. I ran them at 2650 when I was out on the water. Had to wear ear muffs when I went down in the engine room at those rpms. Incredible.
Growing up in the 1970's I used to hear that wonderful screaming Jimmy sound all the time down the highway. Thanks for bringing back good memories, loved it!
We had one back in the 90's at a company I used to work for. I didn't drive it,I was just the driver's helper. That truck was a coffee spilling machine. 😆
In the 1970’s Detroit Diesel told mechanics oil pressure was adequate at 1 lbs. pressure to every 100 RPM’s . That always stuck in my memory . When tuned correctly the initial start the engine would lope 3 times and then smooth out .
No engine, gas or diesel, will ever sound as wonderful as a properly tuned Detroit Diesel. I used to have a 6V92T in an Eagle and I loved going through tunnels or overpasses at 70 mph just to hear it run. Honestly I don’t think that the 6V92T was their best sounding engine but it was still sweet.
Eye of the beholder, I guess. I probably wouldn't mind that sound if it wasn't such a racket. It can sound nice, but let's have it be half that volume.
First semi I drove, a Brockway. Long nose screaming jimmy. Loaded 40 ft. Trailer 60+ mph. Headwing maybe 50mph. Great trucks. Originals had wooden floors. Man brings back memories. 85 now missin. Last tractor 9670 Int. Cabover. God bless.🐻
They used to haul heavy loads of grain with the screaming Jimmy's in Ford 9000s where I grew up. There was an intersection near my house where they would have to make a complete stop. They would shake the paintings off the wall when they went through the gears.
That is the best sounding running 6-71 straight blower I've heard in a long time. Used to be a popular logging truck engine back in the day. Really wicked with a Jake head, but necessary for mountains logging truck. 8V71 twin turbo'd has a real high pitched scream on a hard pull
This, or any 16 cylinder EMD 567 or 645, non-turbo. Those are just much, much bigger Detroits, right? I'd even take the turbo 20 cylinder 645 of my SDP45.
@Rick Delair Awesome reply! I love the deep bass notes of the 645F and anything 710. I helped a buddy change out a cylinder liner in an SD45 a few years back. The pallet it came boxed in was crushed.
I had to repair two CNC mills at EMD about 14 years ago that were used to machine piston pin carriers. The sheer size of the pin carriers alone was nuts!
I cut my teeth on these units in the 70s up until they were ultimately phased out. they were awesome engines and used in just about anything from water pumps to trucks to heavy earth moving equipment and even larger configurations, I still have some tooling for these units,
Yeah back in the day we had garbage trucks with that engine and our landfill was on a young mountain and loaded with automatic transmission it never changed pitch of the engine , what a workhorse !!!
@@tomrobards7753 Ran a Gus Pech earth drill powered through a pto and hydraulic pump by the 671 in the Brockway truck it was mounted on. Get to the job site, put on the ear muffs, throttle it up, and run on the governor all day. Add 50 gallons of fuel and do it over again. Music like bagpipes with the single remarkable tone always running in the background.
I was in high school in 06 getting ready to graduate when I learned of the detroit diesel 2 stroke. We had an old 50s or 60 firetruck in the volunteer fireman's class at the vocational center. I remember hearing that it was a 2 strome diesel and hearing it for the first time it blew my mind. Sounded like a high performance race engine more than a diesel.
I used to work in the oil field. 671’ were on the Rigs. Their were left and right hand engines. They’d bolt two of them together. Had three sets or six engines with long strait pipes coming out. Those pipes were aimed highly at the mud tanks where you had to work sometimes. You talk about Loud ! They were all maxed out RPM’s. I’ve pulled many of them out when they’d blow up ! I still wish I could go back to those days !
Absolutely symphonic to an old retired 100 ton master boat captain. I had a 46 footer with 2 671TA pumping out 485 hp each and the a 62 footer with 2 12V71 TT cranking out 790 each. Music to my ears…. That song, will never get old!!
Without exception this is my favourite engine of all time. worked on these from 1980 till 1997 in marine versions from 3 53;s up to 16v149's love em all, great power, great engines
...and drive them like you are pissed off! They love it!! Our older fleet of fire engines all had DD 2strokes, fire them up cold, run the piss out of them, then shut em down, sometimes 5-10 tomes a day. They were dead reliable, plenty of power, and fun to drive. Our newer stuff, all 4 stroke and electronic, takes 30 seconds just to start(the computer has to go through all of its checks) then you only get a percentage of its rated power until its fully warm(they are all 450+hp and slower then molasses) they are constantly in the shop getting repaired. No bueno! The life of any fire apparatus is a hard one and these newer engines aren’t designed for it. Hey are made for efficiency over the road in a semi, not to be abused!
They were the work horse of the artic . Had an old farmer for a mechanic and one time he had to change the engine out in a Nodwell at 30 below and he used a Bell 206 to lift the engine in and out .
Ah that sounds good one tough engine. We had 671’s in the tractors used to pull airplanes. Pulling 700,000 pounds of 747 pedal to the floor flat out really made em bark. We abused those poor engines don’t remember ever killing one.
They had an old Holmes 50-ton mobile crane where I worked, it looked like a huge tow truck. It had two Detroit diesels in it, one for the crane and one to drive it around. I loved the sound they made.
@@IAmAnonymyz Yeah DD themselves referred to them as NA in their literature, and the blower functioned as only a "scavenger". I wonder if one could technically overpully them and get any extra power from it?
I miss the sounds of the old fishbowls we had around here when I was a kid. Especially going up hills they just sounded awesome. These new NovaBus / NewFlyers they use now just aren't the same. Wish I had the $ to own a fishbowl bus love the style. Nothing beats the sound of a old 2 stroke Detroit!
James Woods The wonderful music that 2 stroke Detroit diesel plays is why I bought a 1980 mci mc9 with a 8v-71 to become my motor home after the conversion.
@@mikemcgrew65 I also loved the sound they made when they idled too, it would be like a little mechanical tune like a hummy repetive rhythm then the air would blow off and the tune would start over every minute or so. I miss those days haha. Fishbowls will be my favorite busses as long as I live. Would love to own one and turn it into a camper or mobile home.
NovaBus sucks. I drive them now as well as New Flyers from 03 to 06(Best) and Excelsiors(Not weathered very well) and New Flyer Hybrids from 07 to 10(07, 08 not bad. 09, 10 not great). Would love to have a chance to drive one of those old fishbowls, just once. Even if it means I gotta get up to change the signs and I get a sore back from that stump they call a seat. Lol
One of the ships I worked on had a V16 Detroit gen set which COULD be started remotely but I always started it locally to hear it start up and run up to 1800 rpm, a fantastic sound. Being a two stroke it sounded like a 4 stroke at 3600, being a V16 it sounded like a straight eight at 7200, fantastic
They sing the sweetest music. From the late 40s until 1979 our bus fleet back home had many 6.71s. They ran forever. Others had 6V 53s and after 1973 they had 55 with 8.71s.
I was born in 1949 in Los Angeles. I loved to hear the diesel trucks and busses growl through the gears. In the mid 1960's, my dad commuted to work in SF in Greyhound busses with the split rear windows. Earth movers would howl as they scooped up dirt. In Vietnam, the electricity was generated by six boxcar-sized two stroke diesels. The smell of diesel exhaust was everywhere. In the 1980's, I got to visit a geothermal drilling rig near Clear Lake, whose power was provided by four boxcar-sized diesel motors. Great memories. Thanks for sharing!
For years, my farm semi was a 67 ford half nose with a 6-71. Basically had the engine sitting in the cab with me. Wonder why I can't hear now. One thing about it, unusual for that engine, was that it never leaked a drop of oil
Oh you bring back memories, when many years ago we used to service one of theses engines in a garage I worked at when I was 16. I liked it then and I still like it!
It's working with its pistons all working together, so it's so smooth. That diesel lasts so long partly because of it's smoothness in all power pulses. A masterpiece.
Once drove a '68 baby hump (2 baggage door GM) it would go 90mph...the speedometer only went to 80, but you could do 3 miles in 2 minutes. Also drove an '81 Eagle 6V92 that would go 90, they both must of been running high RPM.
In the Air Force those Detroits are still in our -86 generators and hydraulic test stands. On the hyd test stands we would get them up to 3000 rpm-awesome sound. Our AGE just doesn’t sound the same with Cummins, Hatz, or Duetz engines
At the 2650 rpm point that great sounding Detroit diesel engine sounded so smooth that it seemed as if it wasn't working that hard. I am 70 years old and I have always enjoyed the sound of a Detroit diesel engine. Great job.
I have the 671 in my lil single axle dump. Even tho it has a muffler underneath I still wear earplugs to drive it. Lol Great running engine with no oil leaks.!!!
I was in court in the late 70s when the head of Thurston Motor Lines shop swore. Under oath that there is no such thing as "governor" on a Detroit engine.
Not much of a mechanic was he? Oh wait, he was head of the shop so most likely not a mechanic, just a pencil pusher. And the jury was hanging on every word of his testimony. Hope the opposing attorney tore him up
My dad worked for an oil rig moving company in the 50s &60s and had 4-71s in their IHs and thier Whites had 6-71s and to this day I can still hear them no other diesel had that sound love the 6v92 and 8v71 sound 👍
I want everyone to notice that the exhaust is clean and no smoke when revved up - if you do that with a four cycle, even a tier 4 engine, you will get smoke !! Yet, these jimmies were bad mouthed for being dirty and can't pass the emissions tests !
I remember when those buses were cruising up and down I95 when I was a kid.it’s music to my ears and good music should be loud. Terrific video. Gold star. 🌟
Nice! Gotta love the sound of a screaming Detroit. I've driven lots of these in trucks throughout my career from a 6v53 through 8v92, mostly 8v71's. When I was young an old guy told me to slam my hand in the door and then drive it like you are mad at it. I found that if you keep them revved up and screaming they don't leak as much oil.
When I worked at Hawthorne Caterpillar in San Diego in mid to late 80’s we held annual Truck Dyno Competitions, and one year a guy showed up with a 12V-71 in an old Peterbilt & man did that thing sing !! Twice the sounds of this one here in a building will really make you smile . Enjoyed this blast down memory lane , thanks 😎👍
That engine sounds smooth as butter! Absolutely awesome diesel-ness! I was a welfare kid in the 70's and whenever our clan had to travel, it was via Greyhound (or sometimes Trailways). The sound of those engines in the terminal was music.
Back in the early 90s I had my own international Harvester load star tandem dump truck, I think it was a 1200 series. It had a 6-71 Detroit, and 5 4 pair of transmissions. Every now and then the short piece of 4 inch galvanized exhaust flex pipe would rot out and it would be open exhaust. What a sound when fully loaded crossing over a bridge and coming down with the throttle backed off at 45 miles an hour! Sounded like the biggest pipe organ in the world on steroids! I love 6-71s
Ya gotta love the sound of the 6/'53 and the 6/71 ... they both were screamers.... I think the 6/53 were worse.... They were an engine that you could kick the literal shit out of and they would go on and on and on....
I rode city buses from the 1970s through the 1980s and this sound was ubiquitous. Not too sure what kind of diesel engines are found in city buses today because I don't have to ride public transit any more but they don't sound like this.
Or to put it another way, it sounds like a “normal” 4-stroke 6-cylinder gasoline or diesel running at 5,300 RPM. It’s no wonder newbies lug them. They’re already lugging when they sound normal to non-Detroit people. The county repaved our road three summers ago. They had a little roller with I believe a 4V71. They hit the governor at 7 am and held it there until 4 pm for two weeks. Had a straight pipe out the top, about two feet long. I like the Detroit sound at idle and under acceleration, but I never want to hear that again. The foreman had just had most of his teeth pulled, awaiting implants. He must have thought he’d been assigned to hell.
@@thegeforce6625 Were we lived as a kid, there was a highway interchange a 1/4 mile away. A quarry to the north about a mile and a half. The last of the trifecta is an Oliver dealer across the highway. A 1900 on the dyno, a quarry full of Euclids and loaded phone booth Jimmies getting rolling from the cross roads. Nah, never enough.
@@thegeforce6625 Sawmill I used to work at had a 4-71 on the debarker, 6-71 on the headsaw and edger, and a 4-71 on a chipper, all straight piped and on the governor from 7 am to 4 pm 5 days a week. Sweet, sweet music. I love to hear them singing, especially when the governors are working hard lol
These 671’s were in the old Crown Coach school buses back in the day. Manual shift made it even better. Music to my ears as a driver every morning. Loved it.
As a truck mechanic I worked on quite a few of these engines in the 70s, didnt matter if you were going 2 mph or a hundred they literall screamed and the oil oh the oil they leaked like a sieve. good memories
Understood I got oil all over my screen
My brother was a D Diesel tech he always said if it ain’t leaking oil shut it down it’s likely empty
Driptroit Diesel
I know it’s not funny when they run away, well it can be. I fired up a 12V149 gen set and she took off, I was ready for it on the flapper. But have you ever seen a man try to run through a F¥cking wall ? 😂
I have taken care of a 8v71 for the last 20 years at a dairy that I have done the mantance work for. It was a outdated hospital genset.
Right now it has about 650 hours of total run time. Was a indoor/ marine unit didn't have a air filter just a screen over the intake to keep your fingers out of.
Only gets run approx 1-2 hours a month.
Don't leak any oil, temp has stayed at operating temp for 20 years. Ready to go on line any time.
Only trouble is now it's too small.
I don't know what's more impressive .. the sound of it and the way it runs or the fact that there's no smoke at all
There's no smoke because all the oil leaked out.
All three !!! 😅😅😅
@@davidsanders6957 such a piece of art..
Please tell me im not the only one who notices how clean Lenny runs... no smoke at all.
Like a champ
Keep in mind it's not under load. Additionally with a super charger properly adjusting fueling on a mechanical pump would be much easier as it has a predictable charge pressure.
Exactly my thoughts
@@DieselRamcharger so Greta was angry without any reason at all XDXD
@@DieselRamcharger amazed by how well engineered these engines are :)
Best engine ever built.
Best diesel ever made. Used in everything from WW2 landing craft to bulldozers, fishing boats, fire trucks and farm tractors. Won our war, grew and transported our food, fought our fires, built our infrastructure, caight our fish, you name it. That sweet GM music was the soundtrack to our cityscapes, waterfronts and construction sites.
I want to see one in a Tesla
@@Themossman9The 2 or maybe the 3 cylinder version might fit. There were also choices of cylinder displacement, IIRC there was a 52 in³ per cylinder displacement version.
Don't forget that nearly every small ( two stand) drilling rig had 6-71 pairs driving the draw works and and mud pump. When pulling pipe they would run flat against the governor for about 30 seconds, then idle for about 30 seconds. They would do this for hours on end, then while drilling they would run flat out for hours driving the rotary table. If they were lucky every few years they got a "Kerosene overhaul" The oil was drained and the sludge washed out of the crankcase with kerosene, then new oil and back to work. They were available from an army surplus for $550 each, or a joined pair with torque convertor for Can$1000. These were often brand new in original crates. A great engine , but the noise was enough to drive you to distraction!
I drove an Attack Troop Carrier with two Grey Marine 671's in Vietnam. It was a converted WWII LCM where you had to handle 25 tons deftly using two D-handle four-foot joysticks. I would twist for power on each engine and shift forward or backward for differential thrust. You could pivot the beast very gracefully when needed. Like coming into a pier against a strong current. Many a night sleeping next to them while the night watch drove going up rivers and canals through the jungle. The 671 sound and smell is still hammered into my night memories. I remember dreaming about home then waking up to the nightmare - just the opposite of normal life.
28 years in the Navy. Worked on 671 and 8V71 engine. Landing craft to SLWT
What a bad ass story. Thank you
I have been retired forever, the taste and smell never leaves you... 🥰
My great-grandfather helped me build my first truck at seventeen! It was a long frame IHC Emeryville grain truck. We took off the bed and cylinder, deleted the wet line, and went to work. Oversized radiator,
DDTT 12V 53, and 15 Speed in front of tandem 3.90 differentials. I pulled b-trains with it. 💯💯💯💯💯💯
I had closed captions turned on....at idle it said, "Hmm......" At 2650 RPM it said, "(MUSIC)"...... How true it is!
Mine said hmm, applause over and over then music, hmm.. Lmfao!
Can it be balanced and tuned to Rev higher.?
@@jtamsett probably but at any given rpm it already fires 2x as much then a 4stroke diesel.
Then there is also the speed at which a diesel-air mixture can burn. This is a limiting factor.
The speed at which the fuel can get delivered is a 2nd limiting factor.
I don't think we will ever see a diesel engine doing 10000rpm.
Holy moly have the auto-generated captions improved recently...usually it wouldn't decipher simple sentences 😂
Also 2:55 how it says applause 😂😂
Detroit diesels make beautiful music 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Back in the mid 80's when I went to diesel school, the class of 12 split up in pairs and our class project was to completely tear down a 6-71, including the rack, reassemble it, and start it up on the stand. Since there was no oil or water in it, no exhaust system, and an open blower without the air box and trip plate, we were only suppose to run it just long enough to idle it and verify the rack was properly adjusted. About a minute.
The teacher had made a steel plate with a handle welded to it to slam onto the blower in the event of a run-away to shut the air off. We got to the last motor when the shop phone ran and the teacher handed the plate to another student so he could answer it.
The last two guys started their motor and the rack immediately went to full fuel. The guy with the plate dropped it and ran like he'd been shot! That motor ran for about 45 seconds before before we could get it shut down! You should hear what a 6-71 sounds like turning about 5 grand with no exhaust and an open blower! Yes, we all went home with stained underwear!
aw yeah first starts with no oil my favorite
Ah yes
😂😂 Some of the old 4 stroke diesels would do nearly the same if the governor was hooked up backwards.
Ask a mechanic why oil drilling pumps were Detroit powered? He replied because it could run governed wide open 24-7. All naysers shut up.
😅
This engine's will run for ever Dependable and simple to work No computer B.S or plastic need it Thanks for posting this video God bless You all
Until the fuel rail goes full send then u got trouble 😯😳
ok boomer
@@EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 what?
Ehhh fuel rack adjustment and injectors under valve cover make it not as easy as say Cummins early 6BT I would say have to be the easiest
Sim, é um motor simples é 2 tempos é melhor que 4 tempos.
Drove one of those screamers with a 13 speed for 12 years starting in 1971 . Hauled gasoline around western Pennsylvania , Ohio and NY. Exhaust had a 90 degree elbow just outside the passenger window and what a roar , loved it !!!
I had a buddy with an old Jimmy with the 8V-71 in it. He pulled a grain wagon and hauled corn and beans to the river from the farm. Another friend had a cab over Jimmy with the 6-71. He hauled scrap steel to a mill. It was always fun to ride along with either of them. Those motors sure loved to sing.
@@ronfullerton3162 which begs the question, why was your friend hauling beans and corn to the river? lol
@@mr.butterworth I'd guess to put on a barge,for shipment.Used to pull a hopper bottom for Tyson.Saw alot of them being loaded.
Don Chastain definitely a barge. Rivers are used for this a lot more than people realize
Sweet exhaust!
What?
Military used to have a lot of them, old pre 70s HET had 16V92 with twin straight pipes, that's why I still listen to them today.
I heard that a lot of the engines built for ww2 are scattered across the world now.
The M746 HET had 12V 71 in them. The later model from late 70s had an 8 V 92T in them. The older M123A1C had a Cummins 903 V8 in it.
Growing up in Ca.in the 60's, we lived near the Cajon Pass and would hear those trucks going up and down the pass day and night. The sounds were incredible.
I bet that was a treat. Oh driving that pass with my learners permit the first time was daunting lol
Could listen all day long I don’t think it’s possible to be tired of the sound
Second that, honestly tops my favorite motor types. Other than VW W-Engines or high-rev V10's
Amen Brother! That is music to my ears!
I can remember as a kid sitting on the engine hatch of fishing boat going out San Francisco bay with screaming Jimmy, at full scream. 40 years ago still can hear it today.
I think that's tinnitus today...
The sounds of San Francisco when I was a kid was detroits
@@willmetz1490 Pretty sure the Muni Rwy ran them. I lived in SF for 20 years. That sound and the smell of baking bread and roasting coffee down at Hill's Brothers.
I had twin 8v53 Detroit's in my Chris craft. It redlined at 2850. I ran them at 2650 when I was out on the water. Had to wear ear muffs when I went down in the engine room at those rpms. Incredible.
Growing up in the 1970's I used to hear that wonderful screaming Jimmy sound all the time down the highway. Thanks for bringing back good memories, loved it!
BrodieBr0 (
We had one back in the 90's at a company I used to work for. I didn't drive it,I was just the driver's helper. That truck was a coffee spilling machine. 😆
Sim, o barulho desse motor é muito bonito.
That was the sound track of growing up in the 80s too ✊🏽
In the 1970’s Detroit Diesel told mechanics oil pressure was adequate at 1 lbs. pressure to every 100 RPM’s . That always stuck in my memory . When tuned correctly the initial start the engine would lope 3 times and then smooth out .
No engine, gas or diesel, will ever sound as wonderful as a properly tuned Detroit Diesel. I used to have a 6V92T in an Eagle and I loved going through tunnels or overpasses at 70 mph just to hear it run. Honestly I don’t think that the 6V92T was their best sounding engine but it was still sweet.
They won't last half as long, either. Detroit last for ever.
Six cylinders detroit diesels are best sounding motors.
Eye of the beholder, I guess. I probably wouldn't mind that sound if it wasn't such a racket. It can sound nice, but let's have it be half that volume.
I once read a you tube comment that said, "it not leaking oil, it's marking it's territory"
First semi I drove, a Brockway. Long nose screaming jimmy. Loaded 40 ft. Trailer 60+ mph. Headwing maybe 50mph. Great trucks. Originals had wooden floors. Man brings back memories. 85 now missin. Last tractor 9670 Int. Cabover. God bless.🐻
Making me homesick, l drove Freightliners out of San Diego Ca for 8 years, straight V12 Twin turbos V12 and Turbo V892 Millions of miles 1972 to 1980
Growing up in Boston in the 80s all the public transportation busses sounded exactly like that. Man that sound brings back memories.
I recognise the sound from a lot of movies of that era as well. it's unmistakeable.
I remember the public transit busses in Dayton Ohio all being Detroits when I was growing up.
And very durable too. We used to call them Timex diesels. Takes a lickin and keeps on tickin
Love that sound!!! And I see literally zero smoke!
Looks to burn super clean for a very old motor!
He just did an in-frame on it about a year ago...
That’s because it’s got all of the modern emissions, Government, and DEF systems added aftermarket 🤣
@@RustyZipper Not on an old thing like this
Yes I notice that too
They used to haul heavy loads of grain with the screaming Jimmy's in Ford 9000s where I grew up. There was an intersection near my house where they would have to make a complete stop. They would shake the paintings off the wall when they went through the gears.
It is clearly evident that Lenny is owned by a master 2 stroke diesel mechanic!
Agreed. Instant startup, super smooth idle en NO SMOKE at all.
Yep no smoke
@@natevanlandingham1945 And no oil leaks either 5 thumbs up😗
Back in the 70’s I used to drive an International Cab-over with an 8-71 under the Dog house right next to me. No wonder I’m almost deaf.
That is the best sounding running 6-71 straight blower I've heard in a long time. Used to be a popular logging truck engine back in the day. Really wicked with a Jake head, but necessary for mountains logging truck.
8V71 twin turbo'd has a real high pitched scream on a hard pull
Heard a 671 on a belt driven sawmill, straight pipe through the roof of the shed.😍
Hear it two miles away
The sound of victory. GM#1 DD 2 stroke diesel power
Nothing sounds Sexier than a general motors built detroit 2 stroke
This, or any 16 cylinder EMD 567 or 645, non-turbo. Those are just much, much bigger Detroits, right? I'd even take the turbo 20 cylinder 645 of my SDP45.
@Rick Delair Awesome reply! I love the deep bass notes of the 645F and anything 710. I helped a buddy change out a cylinder liner in an SD45 a few years back. The pallet it came boxed in was crushed.
All EMD really is, is just Detroit Diesel’s Big Brother.
We need to get Bus Grease Monkey an opportunity to work on one.
I had to repair two CNC mills at EMD about 14 years ago that were used to machine piston pin carriers. The sheer size of the pin carriers alone was nuts!
I cut my teeth on these units in the 70s up until they were ultimately phased out. they were awesome engines and used in just about anything from water pumps to trucks to heavy earth moving equipment and even larger configurations, I still have some tooling for these units,
Drove a fire engine that had one. Could hear it coming a mile away. Then hit the jakes brake!
A Jake on a Detroit? and Turbo? A 671 blower would suck a turbo down the hose and eat it.
Yeah back in the day we had garbage trucks with that engine and our landfill was on a young mountain and loaded with automatic transmission it never changed pitch of the engine , what a workhorse !!!
We also had a firetruck with a huge Detroit can't remember which one but it was a beast you could hear it miles away too
@@tomrobards7753 Ran a Gus Pech earth drill powered through a pto and hydraulic pump by the 671 in the Brockway truck it was mounted on. Get to the job site, put on the ear muffs, throttle it up, and run on the governor all day. Add 50 gallons of fuel and do it over again.
Music like bagpipes with the single remarkable tone always running in the background.
I was in high school in 06 getting ready to graduate when I learned of the detroit diesel 2 stroke. We had an old 50s or 60 firetruck in the volunteer fireman's class at the vocational center. I remember hearing that it was a 2 strome diesel and hearing it for the first time it blew my mind. Sounded like a high performance race engine more than a diesel.
The 6/71 is my favorite Detroit Diesel, it’s music to my ears especially when going through the gears.
SING IT, LENNY! PLAY US THE SONG OF YOUR PEOPLE!
I used to work in the oil field. 671’ were on the Rigs. Their were left and right hand engines. They’d bolt two of them together. Had three sets or six engines with long strait pipes coming out. Those pipes were aimed highly at the mud tanks where you had to work sometimes. You talk about Loud !
They were all maxed out RPM’s.
I’ve pulled many of them out when they’d blow up !
I still wish I could go back to those days !
You sir are totally unsupervised where’s Kelly
We'll have to get him the "unsupervised " shirt .
Best comment!
I laughed way to hard
Awesome 👏!!!!!!!!
@@Gerrit-Max "In my defence, I was left unsupervised..."
Absolutely symphonic to an old retired 100 ton master boat captain. I had a 46 footer with 2 671TA pumping out 485 hp each and the a 62 footer with 2 12V71 TT cranking out 790 each. Music to my ears…. That song, will never get old!!
Gave me flashbacks to watching maximum overdrive when I was a kid
Without exception this is my favourite engine of all time. worked on these from 1980 till 1997 in marine versions from 3 53;s up to 16v149's love em all, great power, great engines
...and drive them like you are pissed off! They love it!! Our older fleet of fire engines all had DD 2strokes, fire them up cold, run the piss out of them, then shut em down, sometimes 5-10 tomes a day. They were dead reliable, plenty of power, and fun to drive. Our newer stuff, all 4 stroke and electronic, takes 30 seconds just to start(the computer has to go through all of its checks) then you only get a percentage of its rated power until its fully warm(they are all 450+hp and slower then molasses) they are constantly in the shop getting repaired. No bueno! The life of any fire apparatus is a hard one and these newer engines aren’t designed for it. Hey are made for efficiency over the road in a semi, not to be abused!
They were the work horse of the artic . Had an old farmer for a mechanic and one time he had to change the engine out in a Nodwell at 30 below and he used a Bell 206 to lift the engine in and out .
Most beautiful sound in the world
Ah that sounds good one tough engine. We had 671’s in the tractors used to pull airplanes. Pulling 700,000 pounds of 747 pedal to the floor flat out really made em bark. We abused those poor engines don’t remember ever killing one.
Still gives me goosebumps...Thrilling sound of a roaring Jimmy!
2650 actually sounds like 5300 because it's firing double of a 4 stroker. I miss hearing these old screamers.
Even at low idle I find myself grinnin' ear to ear! Thanks for the memories! :-)
The sound memory is incredible!? Like an old friend I used to love, and sometimes hated, had straight pipe just outside driver’s window?
O motor por ser 2 tempos sobe de giros muoto rápido.
Same here. I was raised in these then drove them and gosh the sound now brings a smile and tear.
@@edilsonmartins66538
They had an old Holmes 50-ton mobile crane where I worked, it looked like a huge tow truck. It had two Detroit diesels in it, one for the crane and one to drive it around. I loved the sound they made.
Lenny just needs some turbo whistle to complete the orchestra. xD
Its supercharged were ya think Eaton got 671 from?
@@haroldstacy4748 it's not supercharging it's a blower and it doesn't have any affect to the hp its technically naturally aspirated
@@conner5611 is actually correct in this statement
@@IAmAnonymyz Yeah DD themselves referred to them as NA in their literature, and the blower functioned as only a "scavenger". I wonder if one could technically overpully them and get any extra power from it?
IIRC its a gear driven blower not belt driven
I was introduced to the 6-71 when I joined the U S NAVY (6-6-61) @ it helped me to retire.👍👍👍🤛🤛🤛
I miss the sounds of the old fishbowls we had around here when I was a kid. Especially going up hills they just sounded awesome. These new NovaBus / NewFlyers they use now just aren't the same. Wish I had the $ to own a fishbowl bus love the style. Nothing beats the sound of a old 2 stroke Detroit!
James Woods The wonderful music that 2 stroke Detroit diesel plays is why I bought a 1980 mci mc9 with a 8v-71 to become my motor home after the conversion.
@@mikemcgrew65 I also loved the sound they made when they idled too, it would be like a little mechanical tune like a hummy repetive rhythm then the air would blow off and the tune would start over every minute or so. I miss those days haha. Fishbowls will be my favorite busses as long as I live. Would love to own one and turn it into a camper or mobile home.
Kind of shaped like the old White COEs, with a screaming Detroit Diesel powering them!
NovaBus sucks. I drive them now as well as New Flyers from 03 to 06(Best) and Excelsiors(Not weathered very well) and New Flyer Hybrids from 07 to 10(07, 08 not bad. 09, 10 not great). Would love to have a chance to drive one of those old fishbowls, just once. Even if it means I gotta get up to change the signs and I get a sore back from that stump they call a seat. Lol
I have a 1975 Ln 9000 with a 671 in it I love it love the way it performs and shifts so you can bust some gears got to know how to drive a Detroit
One of the ships I worked on had a V16 Detroit gen set which COULD be started remotely but I always started it locally to hear it start up and run up to 1800 rpm, a fantastic sound. Being a two stroke it sounded like a 4 stroke at 3600, being a V16 it sounded like a straight eight at 7200, fantastic
@@Maurice-c6z it was a gen set, 1800 working speed
My Dad had possibly the most stroked out Detroit ever. It was a 671 with 70 injectors turned to 2650. It would make a 290 Cummins cry.
I remember well as a kid hearing a cement mixer go by every day and thinking it had a turbine engine. It probably had turbocharged 8V-92!
Probably the standard roots supercharger
@Rick Delair I was thinking of the noise it makes 😉
They sing the sweetest music. From the late 40s until 1979 our bus fleet back home had many 6.71s. They ran forever. Others had 6V 53s and after 1973 they had 55 with 8.71s.
Loved the sounds of those busses when I was growing up, this really brings back memories! thanks for showing this and letting us hear it sing!
I was born in 1949 in Los Angeles. I loved to hear the diesel trucks and busses growl through the gears. In the mid 1960's, my dad commuted to work in SF in Greyhound busses with the split rear windows. Earth movers would howl as they scooped up dirt. In Vietnam, the electricity was generated by six boxcar-sized two stroke diesels. The smell of diesel exhaust was everywhere. In the 1980's, I got to visit a geothermal drilling rig near Clear Lake, whose power was provided by four boxcar-sized diesel motors. Great memories. Thanks for sharing!
Best sounding 6cyl I’ve every heard
For years, my farm semi was a 67 ford half nose with a 6-71. Basically had the engine sitting in the cab with me. Wonder why I can't hear now. One thing about it, unusual for that engine, was that it never leaked a drop of oil
Oh you bring back memories, when many years ago we used to service one of theses engines in a garage I worked at when I was 16. I liked it then and I still like it!
It's working with its pistons all working together, so it's so smooth. That diesel lasts so long partly because of it's smoothness in all power pulses. A masterpiece.
You know, I never tire of hearing these engines. This one sounds especially sweet ...
Bar's leak....lmao!
Interesting factoid - a Detroit at 2,650 sounds like a cat at 5,300. Hence the wicked sound.
And no soot coming out of the exhaust! That's nice!
Once drove a '68 baby hump (2 baggage door GM) it would go 90mph...the speedometer only went to 80, but you could do 3 miles in 2 minutes. Also drove an '81 Eagle 6V92 that would go 90, they both must of been running high RPM.
Oh man, that is awesome. Ever since i was a kid, i have always loved the way a two cycle Detroit sounds, especially the 671. Great American engine..
In the Air Force those Detroits are still in our -86 generators and hydraulic test stands. On the hyd test stands we would get them up to 3000 rpm-awesome sound. Our AGE just doesn’t sound the same with Cummins, Hatz, or Duetz engines
Tuned to perfection, so clean burning.
At the 2650 rpm point that great sounding Detroit diesel engine sounded so smooth that it seemed as if it wasn't working that hard. I am 70 years old and I have always enjoyed the sound of a Detroit diesel engine. Great job.
The most beautiful engine sound all over the world! I love this! Thanks a lot!
I have the 671 in my lil single axle dump. Even tho it has a muffler underneath I still wear earplugs to drive it. Lol
Great running engine with no oil leaks.!!!
Love the sound of Lenny never missing a beat!!!
I had a 6v53 in a truck and a loader. Screamers.
I was in court in the late 70s when the head of Thurston Motor Lines shop swore. Under oath that there is no such thing as "governor" on a Detroit engine.
Not much of a mechanic was he? Oh wait, he was head of the shop so most likely not a mechanic, just a pencil pusher. And the jury was hanging on every word of his testimony. Hope the opposing attorney tore him up
The 71-series diesels are one of the best ever produced by anyone, anywhere. This one seems to be in good tune.
I don’t have any words for how great that sounds
As a driver I will always miss the sound and feel of these engines. Especially in the Crown Coaches. Total beasts.
Absolute Beautiful gm music no other diesel comes close to a screamin jimmy
With the few hope there is debates over the Cummins 6BT that turns diesel fuel into noise and smoke when those believe a screaming Jimmy comes second.
My dad worked for an oil rig moving company in the 50s &60s and had 4-71s in their IHs and thier Whites had 6-71s and to this day I can still hear them no other diesel had that sound love the 6v92 and 8v71 sound 👍
I want everyone to notice that the exhaust is clean and no smoke when revved up - if you do that with a four cycle, even a tier 4 engine, you will get smoke !! Yet, these jimmies were bad mouthed for being dirty and can't pass the emissions tests !
Clean up high. Dirty down low.clean idle act.
I remember when those buses were cruising up and down I95 when I was a kid.it’s music to my ears and good music should be loud.
Terrific video. Gold star. 🌟
Superb! 6-71 already my favourite engine sound ever but at 2650rpm and burning that cleanly, wow. Thanks for sharing 😊
Every mechanical sound is amplified through the block for us to enjoy.
Man that engine sounds great, very neat idle, clean exhaust revs up smooth without hesitation, nice toy.
Nice! Gotta love the sound of a screaming Detroit. I've driven lots of these in trucks throughout my career from a 6v53 through 8v92, mostly 8v71's. When I was young an old guy told me to slam my hand in the door and then drive it like you are mad at it. I found that if you keep them revved up and screaming they don't leak as much oil.
When I worked at Hawthorne Caterpillar in San Diego in mid to late 80’s we held annual Truck Dyno Competitions, and one year a guy showed up with a 12V-71 in an old Peterbilt & man did that thing sing !! Twice the sounds of this one here in a building will really make you smile . Enjoyed this blast down memory lane , thanks 😎👍
You should make that as a ring tone!
I prefer 4-strokes but the six cylinder 2-strokes always sounded like a beast.
That engine sounds smooth as butter! Absolutely awesome diesel-ness! I was a welfare kid in the 70's and whenever our clan had to travel, it was via Greyhound (or sometimes Trailways). The sound of those engines in the terminal was music.
Back in the early 90s I had my own international Harvester load star tandem dump truck, I think it was a 1200 series. It had a 6-71 Detroit, and 5 4 pair of transmissions. Every now and then the short piece of 4 inch galvanized exhaust flex pipe would rot out and it would be open exhaust. What a sound when fully loaded crossing over a bridge and coming down with the throttle backed off at 45 miles an hour! Sounded like the biggest pipe organ in the world on steroids! I love 6-71s
The Detroit diesel - The most efficient device ever created for converting petroleum into noise.
Ya gotta love the sound of the 6/'53 and the 6/71 ... they both were screamers.... I think the 6/53 were worse.... They were an engine that you could kick the literal shit out of and they would go on and on and on....
That thing is tuned to perfection!
Amazing!!!
I rode city buses from the 1970s through the 1980s and this sound was ubiquitous. Not too sure what kind of diesel engines are found in city buses today because I don't have to ride public transit any more but they don't sound like this.
Or to put it another way, it sounds like a “normal” 4-stroke 6-cylinder gasoline or diesel running at 5,300 RPM. It’s no wonder newbies lug them. They’re already lugging when they sound normal to non-Detroit people.
The county repaved our road three summers ago. They had a little roller with I believe a 4V71. They hit the governor at 7 am and held it there until 4 pm for two weeks. Had a straight pipe out the top, about two feet long. I like the Detroit sound at idle and under acceleration, but I never want to hear that again. The foreman had just had most of his teeth pulled, awaiting implants. He must have thought he’d been assigned to hell.
4v71's are inline fours so they are just 471.
Exactly... shift a Detroit using the tach and the butt dyno if you’re used to 4 strokes, not with your ears.
I don’t blame you at all. There’s only so much of a Detroit diesel that you can hear for a long time.
@@thegeforce6625 Were we lived as a kid, there was a highway interchange a 1/4 mile away. A quarry to the north about a mile and a half. The last of the trifecta is an Oliver dealer across the highway. A 1900 on the dyno, a quarry full of Euclids and loaded phone booth Jimmies getting rolling from the cross roads. Nah, never enough.
@@thegeforce6625 Sawmill I used to work at had a 4-71 on the debarker, 6-71 on the headsaw and edger, and a 4-71 on a chipper, all straight piped and on the governor from 7 am to 4 pm 5 days a week. Sweet, sweet music. I love to hear them singing, especially when the governors are working hard lol
Worked on many tugs with those as gennys
All I know that Screaming Jimmy sounds GOOD, ESPECIALLY when going down the highway. Great short video ✌🏽
These 671’s were in the old Crown Coach school buses back in the day. Manual shift made it even better. Music to my ears as a driver every morning. Loved it.
Now you're just showing off! Love it.