71DeuceAK
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- Fairbanks, Alaska
I'm sure this has been asked a million times over the 20 years of Steel Soldiers' existence by now, but I didn't find anything relevant with my search terms, or looking through the -10:
'91 M923A2: Roommate's truck. We went to get it running today for the first time since parked October 2019. Temps were in the teens, dug it out from a couple feet of snow, aka it's been dormant for almost half a year.
Got the truck running. Background: It's chilly and batteries were known to be somewhat self discharged by now so a kerosene space heater of the "Jet Engine" type was used. It warmed things up substantially before cranking was attempted at 16*F ambient outdoor temp on a frozen, dormant truck, i.e cold-soaked.
No air built...Primary and secondary registered nothing. Modulating engine speed to warm up the air compressor and thus blow warmer air to unstick anything frozen was attempted, albeit not very long as we weren't entirely sure what we were doing.
Air audibly dumps from the (primary, wet?) tank or rather the vicinity of such, i.e behind drivers side step, but not for long once vehicle engine shut down. Thinking something stuck open? Or something froze and broke over the winter?
It's at home in the driveway and still have 90-100 gallons of fuel for the house left (stops pulling at about 35) so not a total SOS...yet...but wanting to ideally fix this weekend.
Thanks!!
'91 M923A2: Roommate's truck. We went to get it running today for the first time since parked October 2019. Temps were in the teens, dug it out from a couple feet of snow, aka it's been dormant for almost half a year.
Got the truck running. Background: It's chilly and batteries were known to be somewhat self discharged by now so a kerosene space heater of the "Jet Engine" type was used. It warmed things up substantially before cranking was attempted at 16*F ambient outdoor temp on a frozen, dormant truck, i.e cold-soaked.
No air built...Primary and secondary registered nothing. Modulating engine speed to warm up the air compressor and thus blow warmer air to unstick anything frozen was attempted, albeit not very long as we weren't entirely sure what we were doing.
Air audibly dumps from the (primary, wet?) tank or rather the vicinity of such, i.e behind drivers side step, but not for long once vehicle engine shut down. Thinking something stuck open? Or something froze and broke over the winter?
It's at home in the driveway and still have 90-100 gallons of fuel for the house left (stops pulling at about 35) so not a total SOS...yet...but wanting to ideally fix this weekend.
Thanks!!