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Member
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- 15
- 18
- Location
- Boston, MA
The truck was running fine. I took it on to get the alignment checked, just as a precaution. The shop was recommended by my regular mechanic, who doesn't do alignments. The shop gets good reviews, and the mechanics have enough gray hair to have seen it all.
On the way home, I got the Death wobble for the first time ever. The first time it was mild, and went away when I slowed down in traffic. I thought it seemed weird, but I figured maybe it was a road surface issue. The second time it was far more dramatic. It felt like the right front tire was jumping a foot in the air with each rotation. I pulled over and looked around, thinking perhaps they forgot to tighten the lug nuts or something. (It happens.) I found nothing loose, but it was leaking coolant. Evidently the shaking shook something loose.
When the guy checked the alignment, he said the spec called for 0, and it was off by 1/16 (.0625). He was able to adjust it easily, and had it precisely aligned at 0. The TM says +/- .0375.
In http://www.steelsoldiers.com/showth...-Fixing-it-with-the-steering-stabilizer/page3 #21Skinny wrote, "Most rigs call for 1/16" toe in."
That's what I had before. Did my alignment guy just screw up a perfectly aligned truck? What should the alignment be? I did search for this, but found no alignment specs other than the TM reference above.
When I got home, the coolant leak had stopped. I had no pressure in the coolant hoses, so I opened the cap and the coolant was about 2" below the cap. I had just driven about 6 miles at about 30 mph. Is is normal for the coolant to have no pressure like that? How long does it take for the 6.2 to heat up? I've never really looked at the cooling system, besides having it flushed and the hoses all replaced by a pro. If I had to guess, I'd guess that the leak was around the water pump. I didn't look closely until I got home, and the leak had stopped by then.
On the way home, I got the Death wobble for the first time ever. The first time it was mild, and went away when I slowed down in traffic. I thought it seemed weird, but I figured maybe it was a road surface issue. The second time it was far more dramatic. It felt like the right front tire was jumping a foot in the air with each rotation. I pulled over and looked around, thinking perhaps they forgot to tighten the lug nuts or something. (It happens.) I found nothing loose, but it was leaking coolant. Evidently the shaking shook something loose.
When the guy checked the alignment, he said the spec called for 0, and it was off by 1/16 (.0625). He was able to adjust it easily, and had it precisely aligned at 0. The TM says +/- .0375.
In http://www.steelsoldiers.com/showth...-Fixing-it-with-the-steering-stabilizer/page3 #21Skinny wrote, "Most rigs call for 1/16" toe in."
That's what I had before. Did my alignment guy just screw up a perfectly aligned truck? What should the alignment be? I did search for this, but found no alignment specs other than the TM reference above.
When I got home, the coolant leak had stopped. I had no pressure in the coolant hoses, so I opened the cap and the coolant was about 2" below the cap. I had just driven about 6 miles at about 30 mph. Is is normal for the coolant to have no pressure like that? How long does it take for the 6.2 to heat up? I've never really looked at the cooling system, besides having it flushed and the hoses all replaced by a pro. If I had to guess, I'd guess that the leak was around the water pump. I didn't look closely until I got home, and the leak had stopped by then.