• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

LMTV Alternator Disaster, engine now catastophic

ogdobber

New member
14
10
3
Location
Los Angeles
Hey guys new to the forum,
Picked up my m1078 fresh off the boat in San Diego from Hawaii. My front driveshaft was bent from presumably a forklift, knew this when I bought it but figured worst case I could pull it off and just drive with the rear until it was fixed. I however just left it on and drove below 35mph to north county (to minimise the vibrations). When I did pull the front driveshaft the truck would only move in “mode” on the Allison selector. Are these things normally fwd??
Anyways I had the front driveshaft retubed and balanced and headed up to Los Angeles, just passed Oceanside, right along Camp Pendleton, BAM then warning lights to stop and temp.
Alternator fell off and collected all the belts. Hence what lead me here trying to find the big bolt size for the alt. Anyways 4 hours later on the side of the freeway I got a gates belt on the water pump and turned around back home.
There was still a slight vibration however nothing close to what it was before. It’s possible all the “damage” was when I drove it the initial 30 miles under bad vibration and what I have now was just the icing on the cake?? Not sure but getting it all back together in a few days when I get parts.
I think after reading this entire thread I’m going to pull the front and rear shafts and take them down to a driveline shop in El Cajon.
One question hopefully someone can answer, when the shop near me retubed, I’m not confident it’s the same length (or correctly balanced). Seems the spline part might be further out?
Can someone measure the tube length for me? Weld to weld


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

Kbarnes0

Active member
102
101
43
Location
Tacoma WA
Hey guys new to the forum,
Picked up my m1078 fresh off the boat in San Diego from Hawaii. My front driveshaft was bent from presumably a forklift, knew this when I bought it but figured worst case I could pull it off and just drive with the rear until it was fixed. I however just left it on and drove below 35mph to north county (to minimise the vibrations). When I did pull the front driveshaft the truck would only move in “mode” on the Allison selector. Are these things normally fwd??
Anyways I had the front driveshaft retubed and balanced and headed up to Los Angeles, just passed Oceanside, right along Camp Pendleton, BAM then warning lights to stop and temp.
Alternator fell off and collected all the belts. Hence what lead me here trying to find the big bolt size for the alt. Anyways 4 hours later on the side of the freeway I got a gates belt on the water pump and turned around back home.
There was still a slight vibration however nothing close to what it was before. It’s possible all the “damage” was when I drove it the initial 30 miles under bad vibration and what I have now was just the icing on the cake?? Not sure but getting it all back together in a few days when I get parts.
I think after reading this entire thread I’m going to pull the front and rear shafts and take them down to a driveline shop in El Cajon.
One question hopefully someone can answer, when the shop near me retubed, I’m not confident it’s the same length (or correctly balanced). Seems the spline part might be further out?
Can someone measure the tube length for me? Weld to weld


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
The Allison transmission/transfercase are combined. In normal operation It splits the ratio 30/70 front to rear. Im Mode, It locks the ration 50/50. It will cause damage if operated w/o a driveline in.

@coachgeo has a great set of links at the bottom of his signature. From what I have read, the vibrations can be detrimental to a number of items. You encountered one. The front timing cover bolts would be next to check for torque.

If you havent yet, I would run through and grease everything up on all the Zirc points on the rig. The drivelines have 2 fittings at each u joint. and one at the slip joint.

Ill grab a measurement if i head down to the shop.
 

coachgeo

Well-known member
5,130
3,453
113
Location
North of Cincy OH
......

@coachgeo has a great set of links at the bottom of his signature. .....
Cant claim any credit for this one. The links are NOT in my sig. line.... they are in Awsomeness sig line.

see his sig line below his July 6th? recent post ..... link below

there is also the parts spread sheet that is a sticky on top of this FMTV forum page

there is ton of links to information and parts on the LMTV MTV facebook group page.
 
Last edited:

ogdobber

New member
14
10
3
Location
Los Angeles
Well shoot, seems like a alternative universe with the same story. Tracked down my oil leak. Cracked block. That’s right behind the exhaust down pipe. Any advice on a new engine would be appreciated



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

Tow4

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,096
646
113
Location
Orlando, FL
Cracked blocks suck.

Draw a vacuum on the crankcase breather, make sure to pull a vacuum the whole time you are working on it. Spray the cracked area liberally with brake cleaner. Grind the crack, spray again with brake cleaner and apply JB weld to the crack. I fixed a Mazda 12A rotary engine this way and it went 50K more miles before I sold the car.

Of course if you don't need to drive the truck, just look for a new engine.
 

Awesomeness

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,813
1,518
113
Location
Orlando, FL
Well shoot, seems like a alternative universe with the same story. Tracked down my oil leak. Cracked block. That’s right behind the exhaust down pipe. Any advice on a new engine would be appreciated



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
That's exactly how my block cracked.

There are a lot of people parting these out now, and you should be able to find an engine for it. Make sure to get the driveshafts balanced before you put the new engine in.
 

ogdobber

New member
14
10
3
Location
Los Angeles
Cracked blocks suck.

Draw a vacuum on the crankcase breather, make sure to pull a vacuum the whole time you are working on it. Spray the cracked area liberally with brake cleaner. Grind the crack, spray again with brake cleaner and apply JB weld to the crack. I fixed a Mazda 12A rotary engine this way and it went 50K more miles before I sold the car.

Of course if you don't need to drive the truck, just look for a new engine.
Thanks that’s great advice. I’m going to need to drive it about ~80 miles to pull the engine (rather than do it in my driveway )


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

ogdobber

New member
14
10
3
Location
Los Angeles
That's exactly how my block cracked.

There are a lot of people parting these out now, and you should be able to find an engine for it. Make sure to get the driveshafts balanced before you put the new engine in.
Interesting. Driveshafts are getting rebuilt as I speak


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

Reworked LMTV

Expedition Campers Limited, LLC
Supporting Vendor
1,505
1,171
113
Location
TN
That's exactly how my block cracked.

There are a lot of people parting these out now, and you should be able to find an engine for it. Make sure to get the driveshafts balanced before you put the new engine in.
Where is this on the block?
 

Asymair95

Active member
115
50
28
Location
Tucson, AZ
Another gentleman used a product called “Lock and stitch” which worked great for him. Not sure if was a welding or brazing product, but he said it is very strong. He really uses his truck too (unlike me), and hauls heavy loads and such. So far it has held up well. Just another option for you.
 

Awesomeness

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,813
1,518
113
Location
Orlando, FL
None of those are going to be good structural solutions long term. The blocks crack at a critical stress point, where the engine bolts to the transmission bell housing. If you plan to do anything other than driving it to a repair facility, or maybe just parades for the rest of its life, you're going to want to either get it welded or replace the engine.
 

ogdobber

New member
14
10
3
Location
Los Angeles
Well patched up the crack with jb weld (just to get to the shop because that engine is coming out) got my new driveshafts and they are butter smooth however as far as engines I can go a couple different routes...
I can buy a low mileage 3116 or rebuild what I got with a virtually free block. What do you guys think?
If I rebuild I’ll do rings, bearings, seals etc. Is it important to use oe cat parts? Or is another brand good? And what else should be done as long as this can of worms is open?
Used takeout engine would sure be easy tho, just spray it fresh yellow and call it a day.
Thanks, Appreciate you guys.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

coachgeo

Well-known member
5,130
3,453
113
Location
North of Cincy OH
Well patched up the crack with jb weld (just to get to the shop because that engine is coming out) got my new driveshafts and they are butter smooth however as far as engines I can go a couple different routes...
I can buy a low mileage 3116 or rebuild what I got with a virtually free block. What do you guys think?
If I rebuild I’ll do rings, bearings, seals etc. Is it important to use oe cat parts? Or is another brand good? And what else should be done as long as this can of worms is open?
Used takeout engine would sure be easy tho, just spray it fresh yellow and call it a day.
Thanks, Appreciate you guys.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
if your spending coin anyway.... and dont have a preference for mechanical injection..... just get an appropriate C7 and add a few wires... Or heck.... go with a cummins 617 I believe was the variant the commercial version of these trucks was sold with. the ol' turn a lemon situation into lemonade adage.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks