Hi guys - I'm trying to figure out the best resolution to a catastrophic failure I recently had on my M1079. The truck is an A0 with a mechanical CAT 3116.
While driving down the highway, the engine had a vibration-fatigue failure on an oil line to the governor. This caused the engine to lose all oil in a hurry, after which it began knocking. We shut it down as soon as we saw the engine oil pressure light come on, but the knock started before we got stopped.
We received advice from a CAT service tech that "the damage is likely already done, but maybe the noise is from the governor and will go away in a few seconds with oil", so we replaced the broken line and filled it up with oil. We ran it for about 10 seconds at idle and were about to shut it down when it clunked to a stop. Currently the truck is parked outside a shop about 200 miles from my home awaiting a decision on how to move forward.
We had the shop take a look, and they advised that the engine isn't fully seized (which means it can be rotated and the trans can be disconnected without having to pull it out with the engine). They gave a quote of $3250-$4250 to swap the engine with one we provide (Used cost is about $3000 with a 6-month warranty from someone in the LMTV community).
I don't know the best way to proceed here... lots of options. Let me know if you have any thoughts/guidance!
- Will an in-frame rebuild kit revive this engine after the seize? Should we drop the pan and pull the head to see if any obvious catastrophic damage has occurred? What should we look for?
- Is our best bet to just do the shop-quoted swap at 6-7K all-in?
- We're considering bringing it back home to work on it, but are currently quoted $2k to tow it the 200 miles home. Any recommendations on transport?
- Nobody seems to love the 3116 engine - should we change to something else (3126, C7, DT466, Cummins 6.7 ISB)? Plumbing for fuel/exhaust/cooling, electrical considerations, engine mounts, and transmission-fitment are all complications that make this seem like a long project.
- Our last option is to abandon the project and sell it as-is, but I'd rather not go this route. If we have to, what's an engine-less M1079 with a fully remodeled cab worth?
Thanks in advance!
Brian
While driving down the highway, the engine had a vibration-fatigue failure on an oil line to the governor. This caused the engine to lose all oil in a hurry, after which it began knocking. We shut it down as soon as we saw the engine oil pressure light come on, but the knock started before we got stopped.
We received advice from a CAT service tech that "the damage is likely already done, but maybe the noise is from the governor and will go away in a few seconds with oil", so we replaced the broken line and filled it up with oil. We ran it for about 10 seconds at idle and were about to shut it down when it clunked to a stop. Currently the truck is parked outside a shop about 200 miles from my home awaiting a decision on how to move forward.
We had the shop take a look, and they advised that the engine isn't fully seized (which means it can be rotated and the trans can be disconnected without having to pull it out with the engine). They gave a quote of $3250-$4250 to swap the engine with one we provide (Used cost is about $3000 with a 6-month warranty from someone in the LMTV community).
I don't know the best way to proceed here... lots of options. Let me know if you have any thoughts/guidance!
- Will an in-frame rebuild kit revive this engine after the seize? Should we drop the pan and pull the head to see if any obvious catastrophic damage has occurred? What should we look for?
- Is our best bet to just do the shop-quoted swap at 6-7K all-in?
- We're considering bringing it back home to work on it, but are currently quoted $2k to tow it the 200 miles home. Any recommendations on transport?
- Nobody seems to love the 3116 engine - should we change to something else (3126, C7, DT466, Cummins 6.7 ISB)? Plumbing for fuel/exhaust/cooling, electrical considerations, engine mounts, and transmission-fitment are all complications that make this seem like a long project.
- Our last option is to abandon the project and sell it as-is, but I'd rather not go this route. If we have to, what's an engine-less M1079 with a fully remodeled cab worth?
Thanks in advance!
Brian