Do you want to have no power at all? The M11 is a vocational truck engine... the way the truck is geared with the C15, I seriously doubt you want to stick an M11 in there. Not only that, but that's a post-ACERT truck... you can't put a pre-ACERT engine in it legally unless the truck was purchased as a glider kit.
Noisy operation of a motor is usually caused by the motor's bearings. Use an instrument that can check the temperature of the bearings. If they are hotter than the surrounding temperature of the motor's frame then change them out for new ones. New bearings should quiet the motor.
EMF is the voltage across a coil (or motor) due to changes in the magnetic field. If you change the current the coil will generate a voltage (in the opposite direction of the current). So it is not the field but the change that matters.
Generally a motor drives some equipment, it could be a fan, or a pump, connected to motor's shaft. The speed of the motor when no equipment is connected to its shaft is known as no load speed.
Motor neuron has got a motor.. but you have to peddle sensory neurons.
The motor used in a table fan is usually a shaded pole motor.
Depends on which motor it has. The 11.1 and 12.7 Detroit Diesel 60 Series, Cummins M11 and N14, and various Caterpillar motors were available options for that model year.
Cummins is the manufacturer.
That depends on which motor you have in it.
NO.
First, you have to change the ECM settings.
If it still has the original motor, is that motor a Detroit Diesel, by chance? There is a possibility of it being an ECM malfunction, but, IIRC, Caterpillar and Cummins were still building mechanical motors for that year. It could also be the result of fuel starvation from... well, it could be a number of sources. Fuel pump going out, fuel filters needing to be changed, debris floating around the fuel lines, etc.
I can do it in about a half hour, and that includes reclocking the wipers. It all depends on how mechanically inclined you are. I do this pretty regularly.
The Ford Motor Company never bought Cummins, Inc. That said, Ford has used Cummins engines in some of its trucks.
between glove box and firewall
That depends on what model of truck it is, and what motor it has in it.
Not entirely. Ford owns 15% to 25% of stock in Cummins. You can get the Cummins diesel in the Ford F-650 and F-750. No, Ford Motor Company (FMC) at one time held less than 10% of Cummins shares but at the present time does not own any part of Cummins inc. From my research, Cummins is an independent company with publicly traded stock.
Engine is the same, injectors and computer are different.