CGarbee
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I thought I would post here instead of the five ton section since I think that this might affect some other sized trucks as well...
The other day, I lost the air line in my XM813 that connects the firewall manifold to the air pressure guage... The speed at which I went from 120psi to 0psi was impressive.
I was sitting in a parking lot right after having disconnected from a tow (M211) and was able to cap the manifold outlet and drive the truck home (without an operational air pressure guage) without incident, but the thought of loosing that line while driving with another truck hooked up on the towbar has got me checking/replacing the line on my other trucks as well.
Specifically, the line split right at the juncture of the crimped on metal end and the rubber line. The rubber line then blew off the end, leaving it threaded into the manifold (that supplies air to the low pressure warning buzzer, wiper motor switch, and accessory valve, etc.) causing an uncontrolled release of air under the dash.
The item used to cap the outlet where the line connected to the air supply was an air line quick connect (Milton, used to connect an air tool hose) as I did not have a pipe plug of the correct size in the toolbox...
The line looked to be pretty old, the truck is a 1971...
The other day, I lost the air line in my XM813 that connects the firewall manifold to the air pressure guage... The speed at which I went from 120psi to 0psi was impressive.
I was sitting in a parking lot right after having disconnected from a tow (M211) and was able to cap the manifold outlet and drive the truck home (without an operational air pressure guage) without incident, but the thought of loosing that line while driving with another truck hooked up on the towbar has got me checking/replacing the line on my other trucks as well.
Specifically, the line split right at the juncture of the crimped on metal end and the rubber line. The rubber line then blew off the end, leaving it threaded into the manifold (that supplies air to the low pressure warning buzzer, wiper motor switch, and accessory valve, etc.) causing an uncontrolled release of air under the dash.
The item used to cap the outlet where the line connected to the air supply was an air line quick connect (Milton, used to connect an air tool hose) as I did not have a pipe plug of the correct size in the toolbox...
The line looked to be pretty old, the truck is a 1971...