Here's a strange thing to ask...
On all of the videos I see of people starting engines, particularly EMD blocks, before they crank it over, they open some relief valve and crank a moment to "blow it out". Then, they stop, close the petcocks, prime the engine and then it's off to the races.
So, why do you need to "blow" anything out? What are they afraid of - cannibalistic space spiders? Combustion chambers are more or less sealed, and there's a hood, so it's not like there's going to be rain falling down an unprotected carburetor. I don't have to do anything like this on my diesel automobile (or any friend with a diesel truck). Clearly, I am missing something.
And what's the deal with all the fuel priming? Every engine, diesel or not, that I know of keeps the fuel rail primed all the time. If the prime breaks, it is because of a leak in the fuel line, and that's gotta get fixed before a fire breaks out. Even if you lose a little from the rail into the cylinder (if the injector is faulty), I expect there's plenty of surge capacity in the fuel filter and water separator to get you over the hump until the fuel pump gets the pressure up from the tank.
Enlighten me - what's the chunk I am missing? Clearly, this must be something related to the enormous size of those engines, because smaller engines never need that level of pampering to get running.