Thunder in NWOR
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Purchased my M35A3 w/w, sight unseen (I know-biggest gamble ever for a non-gambler) from Ft McCoy last summer (2010). Part 1 of the recovery was a frantic phone call to Convoy Friends Wendy & Jeff, pleading for help. Great people, they drove her (already named the Honey Badger by my son Gunnar) 260 miles to their house for winter storage.
Part 2 of the recovery was when Gunnar, my buddy Don, and I went up to W&J's house in July and pulled 8 hours of PM and motor stables, by the book. Gracious hosts Wendy & Jeff accompanied us to the dock at midnight for the ferry ride to Michigan - to miss the "very interesting" traffic through the Chicago area. Please note that there are photos of the efforts at W&J's and the Honey Badger loading on the ship on the 2012 MVPA Alaska Highway Facebook page. We drove her 460 miles from W&J's to near Wooster Ohio for some steering correction (info on previous thread on this website).
Part 3 of the recovery was the trip from Wooster to Dayton and the MVPA Convention. The Honey Badger was on display inside the Nutter Center in front of the Alaska Highway Convoy table.
Part 4 of this recovery adventure started this Sunday morning, August 7. Gunnar and I started home for western Oregon at 0730 local time and spent the next 13 1/2 hours driving 500 miles, into southern Iowa. LOTS of pretty country. Many people passing and waving. and everyone using all 5 fingers!.
Observations: 42 MPH at 2400 rpm. Engine temp, pretty constant at less than 200. Trans temp pretty constant at about 180. Runs uphill same speed as flat and downhill. No smoke of any kind observed from stack. No death wobble nor tire hop. No excessive movement during shifting (shifts into 4th at about 2475 rpm). I refuse to compute MPG on just a couple tanks, but seems to be doing much better than someones projected 7 MPG.
So - here I am in a motel in Iowa, with no way to add photos, so please no slamming for that - will post some when I get home.
Will followup tomorrow nite if we end up in a motel with access for my machine.
Mark & Gunnar - 'on the road in America'
Part 2 of the recovery was when Gunnar, my buddy Don, and I went up to W&J's house in July and pulled 8 hours of PM and motor stables, by the book. Gracious hosts Wendy & Jeff accompanied us to the dock at midnight for the ferry ride to Michigan - to miss the "very interesting" traffic through the Chicago area. Please note that there are photos of the efforts at W&J's and the Honey Badger loading on the ship on the 2012 MVPA Alaska Highway Facebook page. We drove her 460 miles from W&J's to near Wooster Ohio for some steering correction (info on previous thread on this website).
Part 3 of the recovery was the trip from Wooster to Dayton and the MVPA Convention. The Honey Badger was on display inside the Nutter Center in front of the Alaska Highway Convoy table.
Part 4 of this recovery adventure started this Sunday morning, August 7. Gunnar and I started home for western Oregon at 0730 local time and spent the next 13 1/2 hours driving 500 miles, into southern Iowa. LOTS of pretty country. Many people passing and waving. and everyone using all 5 fingers!.
Observations: 42 MPH at 2400 rpm. Engine temp, pretty constant at less than 200. Trans temp pretty constant at about 180. Runs uphill same speed as flat and downhill. No smoke of any kind observed from stack. No death wobble nor tire hop. No excessive movement during shifting (shifts into 4th at about 2475 rpm). I refuse to compute MPG on just a couple tanks, but seems to be doing much better than someones projected 7 MPG.
So - here I am in a motel in Iowa, with no way to add photos, so please no slamming for that - will post some when I get home.
Will followup tomorrow nite if we end up in a motel with access for my machine.
Mark & Gunnar - 'on the road in America'