John Schmidt
Member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2020
- Posts
- 91
- Reaction score
- 178
- Location
- Snowbird - USA
- Ram Year
- 2020
- Engine
- 5.7L Hemi w/FLOWMASTER 50 SERIES DELTA FLOW
Interesting that you're convinced MDS is the cause. I'm not an expert on this (either) but from my time reading, collecting data, etc. it appears that plenty of non-MDS 5.7L hemi engines suffer the same fate regarding hemi tick. Also, plenty of MDS engines with 200k+ miles and no issues. I'm leaning towards the quality of oil/filter, oil change interval, and accumulated idle time as potentially playing a role more than MDS. The geometry of the hemi engine itself also seems to be a weakness and (I believe) that geometry is the same on MDS or non-MDS. That weakness is especially significant at low idle. Many feel that 5w30 protects the engine better at higher temps/loads. But, I'll admit/agree there's no perfect, proven answer out there. My strategy is good oil (Red Line), good filter (RP or high end Fram), 3-4k oil change interval, and as close as possible to NO idling. Fingers crossed!!These newer Hemi's have more oil porting and require more oil to be dispersed to the top of your motor. MDS system and VVT . You ever wonder why they rev so high on start up, even on a hot day...this is why. They were designed that way and speced for 5W-20 not to cut down on production cost but so the oil can reach the top of the motor.
I've put a significant amount of research into the Hemi tick and it's still debatable. I'm convinced it's caused by the MDS system shutting down to four cylinders and to be more specific the MDS lifters them selves. I've recently done away with mine and went non MDS lifters and cam. The MDS lifters are designed differently because those cylinders shut down and are prone to failure.
I've also put alot of research into aftermarket pumps...high volume vs high pressure. Not going to get into, you can Google that for yourself. Seeing I had the motor apart I was definitely replacing the pump even at 60,000 miles. After researching it I decided that a new mopar pump was sufficient enough...although I was very disappointed when I got it and saw it was now manufactured in Korea.
John

