Flyingvan911
Well-known member
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- Kansas City, MO
Hang in there. When you are done with all of the work you will have a great truck. These trucks take more maintenance than a regular vehicle but it is worth it.
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My name on here is a loose identification as an AMC's The Walking Dead fan.Well thank you redbeard. Its still all fun to me. I will try a bit harder to study those TM's. But they do bore me to death. By the way how is the zombie hunting going? Ive been Z hunting for many years and as close as I've ever been is hippies. Meh one in the same
Funny thing is that I was looking around for one of my old VW reseviors. but i cant seem to find one! I know I had a dozen of them somewhere.When I built my VW-powered trike, I used a spun aluminum Sobe bottle with the screw top and a tiny hole poked in the cap for a vent. You can make a brake fluid reservior out of just about anything. Just stop at the local motorcycle shop and get a bad dirt bike innertube out of thier trash bin. Make sure you get the kind with the threaded brass valve stem and remove the vale core. Then cut the tube around the valve stem. The trick is to take a piece of bare wire (welding or braising rod or wire hanger), drill a hole the OD size of the valve stem in the bottom of your reservior bottle, and clean out the drill cuttings. insert the wire through the top of the bottle and out the hole you just drilled and slide the valve stem over the wire and drop it inside the bottle. the wire will guide the stem through the hole in the bottom of the bottle. Then install the washer and nut on the stem and tighten. the rubber at the base of the stem will seal it against the bottle and give you a place to put the hose to the master cylinder. The bottle can be just about anything you want from a spun aluminum bottle to a sturdy plastic bottle. you're only limited by your imagination. A DOT 5 brake fluid bottle is a good choice for obvious reasons. Depending on where you plan to mount it, a couple of sheet metal screws through a pair of large hose clamps with some small pieces of rubber hose on the clamps as cushions to prevent chafing the bottle makes a reliable mounting method.
Did I ever mention my friends used to call me "MacGyver"? lol
Hats off to you. You jumped in with both feet and have been a busy and highly productive camper. Welcome to the occasionally wacky Deuce world. It's one of the more interesting spots around.
I always have my eye open for another. But I really need a Dump truck. I have been thinking about throwing a kit on the deuce but im still not sure about them yet. If I could fine a 5 ton dumper for a reasonable price I might end up deeper in the hobbyAdmit it (like at AA)Don't you just love it !!! And keep your eyes open for another. They're HERD animals.
Thanks, Just ordered a 27si. 200 series 24 volt, 65 amp. One wire. and double pulley to fit original belts. $99 for new alternator and $8 for pulley. Will keep you posted on how it works out in case others could use the info. Rebuild kit for the 27si is $34 for future use. Very common alternator on all kinds of equipment. Cant even get a regulator for the Prestolite for twice that much. I really favor original equipment, but there is a limit.
After looking at your pictures close, it looks like a 27si as well. Going by the connection locations and mounting.
Machines have souls. Yours is getting to know you. It's just like a dog you save from the shelter; it will wet and make a few messes in your home, and chew some things it shouldn't, but as soon as you get to know each other you will have a lifelong friend.So as a new member I would get every one caught up on what the last few weeks of my life have been like. After my 5 mile drive hime I decided to turn it around in the field. This was a mistake. It s#!+ stew out there. So after a few hours of screwing around and making a large mess and very little help from an excavator got it out. It was such a swamp the kubota had to pull itself out with the bucket before I even got close to it. The next day the brakes went soft. After adding the wrong fluid I built a power bleeder (thanks SS) and cleared ger out. Yay brakes again. A few mornings later the batterys were dead. Bad alternator, or regulator I didn't care enough to test. It wasn't charging. I went and got a 24v delco style alternator built a braket after some trial ane error and I was back up and running. Well the girlfriend isn't too happy with the comfort of the truck. So I threw on a muffler a friend had laying around. It is a 4" AERO turbine. It is pretty quit. After I put on the foam insulated hard top with the windows up I get about 86 db of mosty engine noise and still alot of whistle. This is with a phone app so who knows but its suprisingly quiet with the top. Good to go right? Nope I broke an injector line. Sheared off clean right on top of the compression nut coming out of the pump. Three hours later in the middle of nowhere and few tools I got most of the old ferrule off of the broken piece of tube and got it back together. Back on the road. Threw in a pyro. Forgot to check the brake fluid. No brakes. Time to fix this for good. Now I'm in the midfle of a brake overhaul. But I've discovered some broken rivets on a shoe so now Im waiting for a new shoe. It is going to be a very long hobby if it keeps going like this. But I'm still having fun so far
Here comes some pics and maybe a video if it works
When I say full retail I mean I paid what that particular shop would charge anyone. Which I dont do that much locally. And I used one long bolt through both bottom mounting holes. I would have had to use a piece of round stock and drill and tap it out. Or mount two small pieces of pipe and weld them on the same plane then through bolt each or weld nuts on to the ends of the pipe... Those options were way to much work. It was already a chore holding that pipe square to the to of the stock bracket and to the back. Right where I welded that pipe is a tappered angle that is not to conducive to clamping something squareJust looked up and yes that is a 27 si alternator. That part number is a good one and one of about at least a half a dozen 27si models. As far as paying full retail, depending on the brand, NAPA wholesale is around what you paid. Retail is well over $200. So dont think you did bad. Get mine done, hopefully this weekend Ill take some pics as well. Thanks for information
Also You can make the tube spacer a little short as the rear of teh Alt has a bushing that moves. The front should be bolted solid first then rear bolt tighened up. That allows a little play.
Oh yea I'm sure that bushing sqeaked in a bit. After my first mounting idea failed (the drillpress pic and the bracket cutting pics) I let my craftsmanship diminish for a moment when I was cutting the pipe, with a sawzall. So by the time I squared the cut end it came out a bit short. Can't wait to see how yours turns out! I think everyone should do this even if they have a good working stocker. That way they can keep it around if they need to go back to the original set up for authentic purposes. If anyone wants to do this to their truck and has any concerns or needs any help shoot me a PM and I will do anything I can for you. It's hands down the most satisfying thing I've done to my truck. Not that I have done too much.Oh yeah gotcha on holding that square. Did look good though. But you can still use one bolt and one piece of round stock/tubing. The rear bushing moves some, just tap it rearward flush on inside. Of course you already have on and looks great so no need. Just in case anybody else wants to make one. I most likely will do mine the same way you did yours. No need for the extra drilling and taping.
They are kinda like having a girlfriend, you think you did something right and they decide to bring something else up on you!
Don't you mean affliction?Welcome to the addiction....
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