I hate to think operating coach with air pressure so low it could trigger engine shutdown. What about brakes?
so the skinner valve supplies air to keep an air solenoid from shutting down the engine? If so, could low enough air pressure trigger a shutdown. This thing had air leaks all over and the lady who sold it to me had to gun the engine for 15 minutes to get air pressure to build up enough to release the parking brakes. So is it possible that letting up on the throttle while going down a hill could lead to the air pressure to drop enough to stop the engine?
If it’s real close to 200 , I’d restart as soon as possible to get it to cool down. I had mine do it once in a construction zone up a hill in SD. I had no where to pull over, so I shifted down and held the master switch in. It kept running then the alarm stopped and it cooled down on its own with the higher RPM. In my opinion, letting an engine sit and cool is worse than running it to cool. The pistons and liners all have heat that is now not being carried away by water, so they will actually increase in temp before coming down. You’re better off getting it to high rpm and low load to get it cool, keeps everything moving.