JDToumanian
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- Phelan, CA
Hey Group,
I won a 1989 M985 HEMTT on Oct. 21, at Ft. Polk, Louisiana!
Out of the 20 or so HEMTTs sold that day, I believe the one I won is in the best condition. Most of them were in Texas, one in North Carolina, I think one in Wisconsin, and mine in Louisiana. Many of the Texas trucks looked good, but at Ft. Worth they apparently drain the coolant... and then run and drive the trucks. You could clearly see that they were overheating in the pictures, taken while running to show oil pressure and RPM, by looking at the temperature gauge... Pegged at 250 degrees. A 92 series Detroit has 4 rubber o-rings sealing the liner to the block... At the head, top of the air box, bottom of the air box, and bottom of the liner. In other words, the liner has coolant above and below the air box. Those o-rings are extremely sensitive to overheating... A few minutes running with no coolant and the engine could need an in-frame overhaul. Maybe I'd have gotten lucky like HASSON1911, but I like that the Louisiana truck's temperature gauge was showing 160 and also had good oil pressure. I don't think any fluids were drained there.
Anyway, when the EUC clears, a road trip will be at hand. From Ft. Polk, LA to Hesperia, CA is 1,680 miles. I could have it trucked out here, but where is the fun in that? Two friends and I are going to load up and drive out there, and drive the HEMTT back. We'll have a chase vehicle, and hopefully all the tools and supplies we could need. This is not my first recovery by any means, but it is by FAR the farthest and riskiest (financially). The HEMTT is supposedly in running condition, with tires that appear to be like new.
The plan is to do a quick fluid check, then drive it off the base and immediately perform full PMCS. Google Maps shows a NAPA and a Walmart right outside the base in the town of Leesville. I've already bought the Shell Rotella T1 (CF-2 rated) sae 40 weight oil for the 2-cycle Detroit, and Allison TranSynd oil for the transmission, as getting the 15w-40 motor oil out of both is the most important thing that needs to be done.
I haven't picked a route yet... I-10 and I-40 are within a few miles and a few minutes of each other, so it will probably come down to weather, available services, and number of potentially helpful (but hopefully not needed) SS members along the way.
One of my friends coming along has a class A license with air brake endorsement, and the truck will be insured... We will be quasi-legal. I've got a big credit card with a zero balance. I can hardly wait to get going!
Here's the link... http://www.govplanet.com/for-sale/T...-Truck-w/-Rear-Mounted-Crane-Louisiana/652371
Regards,
Jon
I won a 1989 M985 HEMTT on Oct. 21, at Ft. Polk, Louisiana!
Out of the 20 or so HEMTTs sold that day, I believe the one I won is in the best condition. Most of them were in Texas, one in North Carolina, I think one in Wisconsin, and mine in Louisiana. Many of the Texas trucks looked good, but at Ft. Worth they apparently drain the coolant... and then run and drive the trucks. You could clearly see that they were overheating in the pictures, taken while running to show oil pressure and RPM, by looking at the temperature gauge... Pegged at 250 degrees. A 92 series Detroit has 4 rubber o-rings sealing the liner to the block... At the head, top of the air box, bottom of the air box, and bottom of the liner. In other words, the liner has coolant above and below the air box. Those o-rings are extremely sensitive to overheating... A few minutes running with no coolant and the engine could need an in-frame overhaul. Maybe I'd have gotten lucky like HASSON1911, but I like that the Louisiana truck's temperature gauge was showing 160 and also had good oil pressure. I don't think any fluids were drained there.
Anyway, when the EUC clears, a road trip will be at hand. From Ft. Polk, LA to Hesperia, CA is 1,680 miles. I could have it trucked out here, but where is the fun in that? Two friends and I are going to load up and drive out there, and drive the HEMTT back. We'll have a chase vehicle, and hopefully all the tools and supplies we could need. This is not my first recovery by any means, but it is by FAR the farthest and riskiest (financially). The HEMTT is supposedly in running condition, with tires that appear to be like new.
The plan is to do a quick fluid check, then drive it off the base and immediately perform full PMCS. Google Maps shows a NAPA and a Walmart right outside the base in the town of Leesville. I've already bought the Shell Rotella T1 (CF-2 rated) sae 40 weight oil for the 2-cycle Detroit, and Allison TranSynd oil for the transmission, as getting the 15w-40 motor oil out of both is the most important thing that needs to be done.
I haven't picked a route yet... I-10 and I-40 are within a few miles and a few minutes of each other, so it will probably come down to weather, available services, and number of potentially helpful (but hopefully not needed) SS members along the way.
One of my friends coming along has a class A license with air brake endorsement, and the truck will be insured... We will be quasi-legal. I've got a big credit card with a zero balance. I can hardly wait to get going!
Here's the link... http://www.govplanet.com/for-sale/T...-Truck-w/-Rear-Mounted-Crane-Louisiana/652371
Regards,
Jon
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