hethead
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- Seattle, WA.
I'm offshore with a very slow internet connection and can't post pictures but at some point, I will.
Part 3.
Yep. That's coolant. Luckily the leak was just a crack in the hose near the clamp so I was able to cut away some hose, push it further onto the radiator and re-clamp it. Seems tight and leak free for now.
On the road again...
Pulled into a truck stop later in the morning and saw some oil leaking out of the hub seal on the forward tandem axle. Leaking pretty bad. I pulled the axle breather and it seemed like maybe it was clogged, so I cleaned it out, put it back on and got back on the road. Next stop, the other side was leaking. I know the breather's clear but I'm not taking any chances so I found a NAPA and replaced the breather with a barbed fitting and some hose that ran up to the frame rail. I also made sure I still had a safe amount of gear oil in the diff and a few spare quarts on board.
Back on the road. Still leaking. I'll need some seals.
It took hundreds of miles but eventually it revealed itself. I'm glad I'm only doing a 1,000 mile leg before the run from Florida to Seattle. 500-600 more miles. The axle seals can wait a little longer.
It's a beautiful evening. The sunset is a golden red and this stretch of road is smooth and flat, winding through the trees. The temperature's perfect. Dad looks happy. The big Cummins is purring. Purring loudly but still purring. Curiously, it looks like my oil pressure gauge is filling with... oil? Yep. It's oil. It's halfway up the glass so I can still read the pressure though and that looks great. It's important to be positive!
Before we stopped for the night, the gauge was almost full. Not in a good way (like a fuel gauge) but in a "only a tiny bit of the needle is sticking up out of the black oil" way. I figured if it gets totally filled I'll have to deal with it. For one, I won't be able to read it, and two, if it fills completely up, the next step might be for it to burst or spring a leak, spraying hot engine oil in the cab and losing oil pressure. This is a first for me.
Next morning, the gauge is empty. As we drove through the morning, it slowly filled again, but I knew we could make it. We were almost there.
We crossed the state line into Florida leaking oil out of the axle and into the oil gauge, but a few hours later, we made it home.
The next day I adjusted the alternator. Didn't even know that was possible. It was set to 24 volts, but now it charges at around 27 and seems to work just fine. Batteries are good now too. They spin the engine over quick.
I took off the flat spot front tire and put the spare on. Wow. What a difference. I know I'm a little weird but I think this thing rides just fine. What a difference a round tire makes. I sure wish I had that one up front a thousand miles ago.
All the problems I had were addressed by Eastern in a way that I felt was fair. Some were impossible to predict. A hub seal developing a leak hundreds of miles later? An oil gauge developing an internal oil leak into the body of the gauge?
A few were oversights (bad spot on the tire, batteries low on water, etc) but they made them right and that's all I can ask. The point of this road trip story is this...
If you decide to do something like this someday, have fun. Do it. But try to budget enough time in to look over everything. Everything. before you set out on the road and leave some time for addressing any problems before you go. I wish I had a voltmeter and checked the batteries/charging system before I left. I wish I checked the tires more carefully, etc, but I didn't. I wish I spent more time under the hood, double checking everything. They're big trucks and there's a lot to cover. A lot can be missed if you hurry. And no matter how well you look them over, they are old trucks (mine's 48 years old) and when you put them on the road and start pushing them for hundreds or thousands of miles, there's a really good chance a few weaknesses are going to be exposed.
I exposed a few and luckily they were things I could deal with with basic tools (and the kindness of strangers) or they were things I could live with for a couple days on the road.
The important thing to me is, it's a sweet running engine with a good shifting transmission and after a few days of work, changing seals, fluids, a few leaky fuel o-rings, some hoses and an oil gauge, I'll be hitting the road West. 3,000 miles across this big, beautiful country.
I'm sure I'll have a few more issues creep up. I'm sure there will be times when I question my decision but I'm also sure it'll be an adventure and I can't wait.
Part 3.
Yep. That's coolant. Luckily the leak was just a crack in the hose near the clamp so I was able to cut away some hose, push it further onto the radiator and re-clamp it. Seems tight and leak free for now.
On the road again...
Pulled into a truck stop later in the morning and saw some oil leaking out of the hub seal on the forward tandem axle. Leaking pretty bad. I pulled the axle breather and it seemed like maybe it was clogged, so I cleaned it out, put it back on and got back on the road. Next stop, the other side was leaking. I know the breather's clear but I'm not taking any chances so I found a NAPA and replaced the breather with a barbed fitting and some hose that ran up to the frame rail. I also made sure I still had a safe amount of gear oil in the diff and a few spare quarts on board.
Back on the road. Still leaking. I'll need some seals.
It took hundreds of miles but eventually it revealed itself. I'm glad I'm only doing a 1,000 mile leg before the run from Florida to Seattle. 500-600 more miles. The axle seals can wait a little longer.
It's a beautiful evening. The sunset is a golden red and this stretch of road is smooth and flat, winding through the trees. The temperature's perfect. Dad looks happy. The big Cummins is purring. Purring loudly but still purring. Curiously, it looks like my oil pressure gauge is filling with... oil? Yep. It's oil. It's halfway up the glass so I can still read the pressure though and that looks great. It's important to be positive!
Before we stopped for the night, the gauge was almost full. Not in a good way (like a fuel gauge) but in a "only a tiny bit of the needle is sticking up out of the black oil" way. I figured if it gets totally filled I'll have to deal with it. For one, I won't be able to read it, and two, if it fills completely up, the next step might be for it to burst or spring a leak, spraying hot engine oil in the cab and losing oil pressure. This is a first for me.
Next morning, the gauge is empty. As we drove through the morning, it slowly filled again, but I knew we could make it. We were almost there.
We crossed the state line into Florida leaking oil out of the axle and into the oil gauge, but a few hours later, we made it home.
The next day I adjusted the alternator. Didn't even know that was possible. It was set to 24 volts, but now it charges at around 27 and seems to work just fine. Batteries are good now too. They spin the engine over quick.
I took off the flat spot front tire and put the spare on. Wow. What a difference. I know I'm a little weird but I think this thing rides just fine. What a difference a round tire makes. I sure wish I had that one up front a thousand miles ago.
All the problems I had were addressed by Eastern in a way that I felt was fair. Some were impossible to predict. A hub seal developing a leak hundreds of miles later? An oil gauge developing an internal oil leak into the body of the gauge?
A few were oversights (bad spot on the tire, batteries low on water, etc) but they made them right and that's all I can ask. The point of this road trip story is this...
If you decide to do something like this someday, have fun. Do it. But try to budget enough time in to look over everything. Everything. before you set out on the road and leave some time for addressing any problems before you go. I wish I had a voltmeter and checked the batteries/charging system before I left. I wish I checked the tires more carefully, etc, but I didn't. I wish I spent more time under the hood, double checking everything. They're big trucks and there's a lot to cover. A lot can be missed if you hurry. And no matter how well you look them over, they are old trucks (mine's 48 years old) and when you put them on the road and start pushing them for hundreds or thousands of miles, there's a really good chance a few weaknesses are going to be exposed.
I exposed a few and luckily they were things I could deal with with basic tools (and the kindness of strangers) or they were things I could live with for a couple days on the road.
The important thing to me is, it's a sweet running engine with a good shifting transmission and after a few days of work, changing seals, fluids, a few leaky fuel o-rings, some hoses and an oil gauge, I'll be hitting the road West. 3,000 miles across this big, beautiful country.
I'm sure I'll have a few more issues creep up. I'm sure there will be times when I question my decision but I'm also sure it'll be an adventure and I can't wait.
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