- 4,808
- 742
- 113
- Location
- Liberty Hill, SC
Not for good I hope.
Yesterday, my driver was returning from Charleston, SC to Winnsboro, SC (approx 120miles) with the empty M967 tanker. At mile post 176, he noticed the oil pressure had dropped a little from its normal running warm place (around 60psi) and the temp had gone up. He also noticed an occasional wiff of antifreeze. He didn't stop, he didn't call. He drove until the oil pressure dropped to about 15psi, and there was boiling antifreeze coming in the cab through the shifter hole. Then he stopped around 2pm, and called me. He was at MM 139. So he drove it, overheating, for 40 miles. He swears the temp gauge didn't go over 200, and if he had thought it was really serious he would have stopped.
Well, I get down there, and you can't even lay your hand on the engine. Took him home, and came back with Angie around 9pm. The engine was still warm. I brought another thermostat (figured that was an easy maybe fix) Replaced it, filled it back up, and she fired up. Had to go another 40 miles to the house.
Oil pressure was right up around 80psi when I started- by the time I got to he house, it had dropped to 25psi. Not really bad, but lower than it should have been. Now I didn't really notice anything either- until the oil pressure dropped, everything seemed fine to me, and I know what to look/listen/smell for. the temp gauge would go up to 190 or so and the new thermo would open and it would drop back down. never went over that.
About 5 miles from the house, the tem gauge started acting funny- also with the oil pressure dropping, I knew it was overheating again. I limped it to the house, and when I stopped there was steam pouring out of the overflow tube on the expansion tank and after I shut it off you could hear the coolant boiling in the block. NOT GOOD
Felt the radiator, and the top is scalding hot- midway down and the bottem is very very cold. So either I have a plugged radiator, another bad thermo, (both unlikely) or a failed water pump (that's my answer and I'm sticking to it.)
I just hope the other guy and I didn't do any major damage to the engine. I've put almost 12k miles on this truck in the year and 5 months I've owned it- she just needs a break probably!
Yesterday, my driver was returning from Charleston, SC to Winnsboro, SC (approx 120miles) with the empty M967 tanker. At mile post 176, he noticed the oil pressure had dropped a little from its normal running warm place (around 60psi) and the temp had gone up. He also noticed an occasional wiff of antifreeze. He didn't stop, he didn't call. He drove until the oil pressure dropped to about 15psi, and there was boiling antifreeze coming in the cab through the shifter hole. Then he stopped around 2pm, and called me. He was at MM 139. So he drove it, overheating, for 40 miles. He swears the temp gauge didn't go over 200, and if he had thought it was really serious he would have stopped.
Well, I get down there, and you can't even lay your hand on the engine. Took him home, and came back with Angie around 9pm. The engine was still warm. I brought another thermostat (figured that was an easy maybe fix) Replaced it, filled it back up, and she fired up. Had to go another 40 miles to the house.
Oil pressure was right up around 80psi when I started- by the time I got to he house, it had dropped to 25psi. Not really bad, but lower than it should have been. Now I didn't really notice anything either- until the oil pressure dropped, everything seemed fine to me, and I know what to look/listen/smell for. the temp gauge would go up to 190 or so and the new thermo would open and it would drop back down. never went over that.
About 5 miles from the house, the tem gauge started acting funny- also with the oil pressure dropping, I knew it was overheating again. I limped it to the house, and when I stopped there was steam pouring out of the overflow tube on the expansion tank and after I shut it off you could hear the coolant boiling in the block. NOT GOOD
Felt the radiator, and the top is scalding hot- midway down and the bottem is very very cold. So either I have a plugged radiator, another bad thermo, (both unlikely) or a failed water pump (that's my answer and I'm sticking to it.)
I just hope the other guy and I didn't do any major damage to the engine. I've put almost 12k miles on this truck in the year and 5 months I've owned it- she just needs a break probably!