acme66
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- Plains, Montana
Lots of talk of changing out the coolant on the NHC 250 because of liner failure. Well I have done that with three different motors so far and I just lost the third one today. If it was on your to-do list just put it off for a bit. I am at 100% failure the year after making the switch, all look to be dropped liners. That includes a truck bought from a logging company which was used much harder than I have been using it yet I am the one the liner craps out on. If you are reading this later than May of 2017 just email me acme66@yahoo.com and see what I found out. I am starting to think that the ELC coolants are attacking the o-rings or maybe they are dissolving all the happy little rust particles that are keeping them sealed up. Maybe it is nothing to do with the coolant and I have just been that unlucky but the pattern is so precise between each of them. Let alone miles, this one failed 300 yards from the exact spot the first one died. Just give me some time to figure out what is happening. My thought right now is wait on the coolant swap, let's use my trucks as the test case.
In other news if someone wants to share a beer and let me cry on their shoulder for a bit that would be cool. I am not sure the company can eat the cost/time of a third lost motor and now I worry about how long they are going to last even if I rebuild them. People say a school bus motor will not have the grunt to do the job but then that also say the 250 is a rock-solid reliable workhorse. Tonight I am just sort of twisting in the wind.
Ken
In other news if someone wants to share a beer and let me cry on their shoulder for a bit that would be cool. I am not sure the company can eat the cost/time of a third lost motor and now I worry about how long they are going to last even if I rebuild them. People say a school bus motor will not have the grunt to do the job but then that also say the 250 is a rock-solid reliable workhorse. Tonight I am just sort of twisting in the wind.
Ken