saddamsnightmare
Well-known member
- 3,618
- 80
- 48
- Location
- Abilene, Texas
January 19th, 2008.
Learned masters of the Deuce, I have a question or two:
Well, it was 25*F last night, and this morning the M35A2 decides not to start when I'm rolling out the door to work, so the Unimog bails it out. The truck's been running well lately, except it was a slow starter yesterday under 30*F temperatures, other then that the alternator guage has been indicating normal charging rates, the temperature guage has been intermittent, and the fuel gauge has been very intermittent in operation, and NO lights were left on. My best guess is that the batteries are Government issue, probably more then 7 years old as they have lot numbers on the tops, and given that this truck has covered little more then 1275 miles since 2002 in Government and private use,
the batteries are probably terminal and not up to the job of starting her in cold weather.
I have the 1975 -10 manual and it says to refer to maintenance, and the CD manuals are on the computer and so I just have to dig (I LOVE those old paper manuals, you can heft and open right up) in there. Symptoms: master switch on, air brake buzzer on, engine stop in, push starter button in and flame heater switch on, and NOTHING!!
Headlights work, but no crank.
I'll either have to dig up a very heavy set of jumper cables and see if the Unimog can charge it (over a short time), or locate a heavy duty 24VDC charger and recharge it, but my basic guess is as this truck ran in temperatures above 30*F, the batteries probably bought it and they ain't gonna be cheap. But you get what you pay for.
IF THE INDICATIONS ARE FOR REPLACEMENT OF THE BATTERIES:WHAT MAKES OR SIZE DO YOU FIND WORK BEST IN THESE TRUCKS? (No, I'm not shouting, it's for us old guys without reading glasses ala John Hancock). I am also looking for a set of air compressor gaskets for the base and rear round crank cover, also the fuel filter base gaskets as mine have started to leak slightly (NEVER BRAG about your truck not leaking, I did and the gremlins decided to make me pay for my pride).
Thanks again for the many kindesses, particularly Mr. G. Kivett and Mr. Will Wagner for assisting me with windshield and cab seat mounting screws, and for the MANY useful insights and comments that the members have furnished to me.
I remain, Sirs and Madames,
Most Sincerely,
Kyle F. McGrogan
1963 Mercedes Benz Unimog S404.114 (Swiss)
1971 KAiser Jeep Wo/W "Saddam's Nightmare" Vietnam and Desert Storm Veteran Deuce
(that doesn't like the cold, apparently).