Changes to the engine are focused around efficiency, robustness and thermal management.
May 27, 2021
Detroit
The Detroit DD13 engine is now available with new features and power ratings, making the 13L a powerful choice for any highway or job site. Changes to the engine are focused around efficiency, robustness and thermal management, all of which contribute to a low total cost of ownership (TCO) and maximum uptime. The DD13 Gen 5 was built on the proven Heavy-Duty Engine Platform from Detroit on which our customers depend to deliver unmatched efficiency and power, says David Carson, senior vice president, sales and marketing for Daimler Trucks North America. The DD13 Gen 5 builds on that legacy, while offering even more flexibility and options for specific application needs.
The DD13 Gen 5 was built on the proven Heavy-Duty Engine Platform from Detroit.
Detroit DD13 engine has new power ratings and features for its fifth generation that focus on efficiency, robustness and thermal management.
David Carson, senior vice president, sales and marketing for Daimler Trucks North America, noted that the DD13 Gen 5 was built on the proven Heavy-Duty Engine Platform from Detroit, yet the DD13 Gen 5 builds on that legacy, in that it is 60 lbs. lighter than its predecessor due to its new aftertreatment system (ATS). It is available with the Freightliner Cascadia for on-highway applications and Western Star 49X trucks for vocational applications such as construction and municipal jobs.
Is university the only way to get into design? designweek.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from designweek.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
May 15—When asked what set her toward a career in education, Sandra Miller rattled off powerful moments of teachers who inspired her as a student. Miller, Cassia County School District
Share: Detroit police aim guns at Black men during Detroit Uprising, July 25, 1967 / Image: AFP via Getty Images
Detroit police killed hundreds of unarmed Blacks in response to the civil rights movement. Their ability to get away with it reveals why today’s initiatives to make police more accountable are bound to fail, and how we can do better.
Clifford “Chucky” Howell, a thirteen-year-old Black male, was walking home from playing at a friend’s house when a white Detroit police officer shot him near his own backyard on the evening of Sept. 13, 1969. The patrol team did not summon medical assistance for at least forty minutes, and Chucky died later at the hospital. Officers on the scene claimed that he had been fleeing the burglary of a white family’s home, a felony, and that it was therefore appropriate to shoot him. Numerous eyewitness accounts, however, insisted Chucky had been an oblivious bystander. His parents and a local Black organiz