manders
Member
- 92
- 0
- 6
- Location
- Spokane Valley, WA
tl;dr ... something broke, I need seem guidance/advice.
M923A0, 24K miles and 29 hours on the clock (I presume since rebuild, but I don't know if it was a major or minor rebuild).
The weather is finally starting to cooperate where I can count on a few hours of dryness to do some work.
Bright and early at the crack of 10am I picked up my truck from the storage lot about 5 miles from my house, the first four of which are nice level ground.
The last mile is about a 400 foot vertical ascent on a two-lane paved road with a fair number of turns, steep embankments, no shoulders, lots of fun on a dark night ... you get the idea.
I've done this drive 3 times in the last 3 months with no hint of problem, but this time I'm two-thirds of the way up and start to feel a slight loss of power (I'm manually in 2nd).
About this same time, smoke starts to come into the cab from under the passenger seat. I'm watching the smoke, watching the road, watching the gauges, watching the road, watching the cars, watching the smoke ... and in full-scale red-alert mode.
There is no place to pull over that is even remotely safe and/or not fraught with buckets of "imperial entanglement", so I decide to tough it out through the last 400 yards.
(After the initial cloud of smoke, it never got more dense in the cab than that produced by a good cigar! I also didn't detect any particular scent, though ... as I had a couple of other things on my mind ... it could have smelled like a thousand roses and I probably wouldn't have noticed!)
I turn up the last small hill - a nice 25° climb - and make it another 50 yards before chug chug chug wheeze wheeze wheeze stop!
I throw on the brake, jump down from the cab, place a chock by the front wheel, run the remaining 50 yards to my car and grab a fire extinguisher (note to self ... put it in the darn truck next time ... ) and race back!
The good ... GREAT! ... news is that there are no flames, smoke is gone, and a puddle of green fluid (yes green ... see below) is starting to pool under the rig right about mid-cab, nearer the passenger side.
I throw a couple more chocks on the wheels and try to get my heartbeat back down below 200!
Step 1 ... open the cowling take a look around.
Problem 1 ... steep backward cant of hill makes it absolutely impossible for little ol' me to open that darn thing up.
Step 2 ... get a tow!
Problem 2 ... Find a tow truck that can handle both this truck and those hills, and do it before the neighborhood finds their picks, axes, and torches.
Just in case it wasn't already obvious ... did I forget to mention that I'm brand-new to this "hobby".
For whatever reason, when I felt the loss of power, saw the smoke, and then the motor died ... my first guess was something tranny-related. Any fluid I saw I expected to be reddish/gold, like all the other transmission fluid I've ever spilled all over the wife's garage.
(I ***believe*** I'm running Dex3 in this, but I haven't yet got a call back from the mechanic who gave it the once-over when I picked it up from JBLM in late October.)
I was very surprised to see green, which looked more like the antifreeze I routinely spill all over the back of my SUV.
About four hours later, I'm back at the storage yard, 4 bills poorer for the tow, trying to figure out just what the heck is going on!!!
Attached are some fine photos for your entertainment.
The first shows just how close I got to my destination, specifically, just the other side of the telephone pole up ahead to the left!!! (From now on, the phrase is ... horseshoes, hand grenades, and Saturday-afternoon-fix-em-up-plans!)
The rest show splatter in the engine compartment and undercarriage which I hope might cause someone on this most excellent forum to jump in with that obvious answer, you know ... something like ... well of course, dummy, you forgot to brim-prong the gym-frip on the dom-knocker ... everyone knows that!!!
(My apologies for not taking more and/or better pics. Aside from not really knowing what the heck I was looking for ... I was already an hour late for playing chauffeur to the kids and a nice spring shower was drenching everything in sight!)
I did not try to drive it or even put it in gear (dumb yes ... stoopid no!), though I did have to start it for all of about 15 seconds in order to center the steering for the tow (which it did without problems or hesitation).
So anyway ... unless I get a quorum telling me otherwise, I'm going to have it towed to a shop for the repairs.
If it's unrelated to the transmission, I've got a local shop about 5 miles away that will ***only*** cost me $175 to get it there.
If y'all think it's definitely transmission related, the closest qualified Allison service center is about $300 away ... so if I'm gonna need to spend that I'd just as soon spend it before the $175 instead of after.
So there it is ... a fine afternoon ruined!!! Once y'all get done laughing at this newbie ... I appreciate any guidance and advice.
Thanks,
MAnders
M923A0, 24K miles and 29 hours on the clock (I presume since rebuild, but I don't know if it was a major or minor rebuild).
The weather is finally starting to cooperate where I can count on a few hours of dryness to do some work.
Bright and early at the crack of 10am I picked up my truck from the storage lot about 5 miles from my house, the first four of which are nice level ground.
The last mile is about a 400 foot vertical ascent on a two-lane paved road with a fair number of turns, steep embankments, no shoulders, lots of fun on a dark night ... you get the idea.
I've done this drive 3 times in the last 3 months with no hint of problem, but this time I'm two-thirds of the way up and start to feel a slight loss of power (I'm manually in 2nd).
About this same time, smoke starts to come into the cab from under the passenger seat. I'm watching the smoke, watching the road, watching the gauges, watching the road, watching the cars, watching the smoke ... and in full-scale red-alert mode.
There is no place to pull over that is even remotely safe and/or not fraught with buckets of "imperial entanglement", so I decide to tough it out through the last 400 yards.
(After the initial cloud of smoke, it never got more dense in the cab than that produced by a good cigar! I also didn't detect any particular scent, though ... as I had a couple of other things on my mind ... it could have smelled like a thousand roses and I probably wouldn't have noticed!)
I turn up the last small hill - a nice 25° climb - and make it another 50 yards before chug chug chug wheeze wheeze wheeze stop!
I throw on the brake, jump down from the cab, place a chock by the front wheel, run the remaining 50 yards to my car and grab a fire extinguisher (note to self ... put it in the darn truck next time ... ) and race back!
The good ... GREAT! ... news is that there are no flames, smoke is gone, and a puddle of green fluid (yes green ... see below) is starting to pool under the rig right about mid-cab, nearer the passenger side.
I throw a couple more chocks on the wheels and try to get my heartbeat back down below 200!
Step 1 ... open the cowling take a look around.
Problem 1 ... steep backward cant of hill makes it absolutely impossible for little ol' me to open that darn thing up.
Step 2 ... get a tow!
Problem 2 ... Find a tow truck that can handle both this truck and those hills, and do it before the neighborhood finds their picks, axes, and torches.
Just in case it wasn't already obvious ... did I forget to mention that I'm brand-new to this "hobby".
For whatever reason, when I felt the loss of power, saw the smoke, and then the motor died ... my first guess was something tranny-related. Any fluid I saw I expected to be reddish/gold, like all the other transmission fluid I've ever spilled all over the wife's garage.
(I ***believe*** I'm running Dex3 in this, but I haven't yet got a call back from the mechanic who gave it the once-over when I picked it up from JBLM in late October.)
I was very surprised to see green, which looked more like the antifreeze I routinely spill all over the back of my SUV.
About four hours later, I'm back at the storage yard, 4 bills poorer for the tow, trying to figure out just what the heck is going on!!!
Attached are some fine photos for your entertainment.
The first shows just how close I got to my destination, specifically, just the other side of the telephone pole up ahead to the left!!! (From now on, the phrase is ... horseshoes, hand grenades, and Saturday-afternoon-fix-em-up-plans!)
The rest show splatter in the engine compartment and undercarriage which I hope might cause someone on this most excellent forum to jump in with that obvious answer, you know ... something like ... well of course, dummy, you forgot to brim-prong the gym-frip on the dom-knocker ... everyone knows that!!!
(My apologies for not taking more and/or better pics. Aside from not really knowing what the heck I was looking for ... I was already an hour late for playing chauffeur to the kids and a nice spring shower was drenching everything in sight!)
I did not try to drive it or even put it in gear (dumb yes ... stoopid no!), though I did have to start it for all of about 15 seconds in order to center the steering for the tow (which it did without problems or hesitation).
So anyway ... unless I get a quorum telling me otherwise, I'm going to have it towed to a shop for the repairs.
If it's unrelated to the transmission, I've got a local shop about 5 miles away that will ***only*** cost me $175 to get it there.
If y'all think it's definitely transmission related, the closest qualified Allison service center is about $300 away ... so if I'm gonna need to spend that I'd just as soon spend it before the $175 instead of after.
So there it is ... a fine afternoon ruined!!! Once y'all get done laughing at this newbie ... I appreciate any guidance and advice.
Thanks,
MAnders