wcuhillbilly
Member
- 421
- 5
- 18
- Location
- Devils Tower, WY
Yup,,,, definatly moving faster than me,,,,,Planning to have that project going in mid-late July. On chassis hydraulics here we go!
BTW,,, sorry for your loss..... RIP 82 Yota....
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
Yup,,,, definatly moving faster than me,,,,,Planning to have that project going in mid-late July. On chassis hydraulics here we go!
It your driving it from jackson to your place in east Tennessee its about 7hours.Well after finishing my deployment and doing some work to the truck at pick up location I decided to drive it. All brake lines and tires looked in good shape. 4 hr drive back to my place. Overall truck is in average shape. It didn't idle well went I first got it but that cleared up with fresh diesel and diesel additive. Parking brake shoes will need replaced, they are pretty worn but the good news is the crane works (see picture;don't mind liquid on boom supports that's water)
To do list for now is:
- fix front winch; broke shear pin
- fix rear winch; expect broke shear pin wound too tight
- respool all winches
- fix electric shut off; currently disconnected
- seat covers
- general mx; oil, hoses, belts
From what I can tell from the military mx records the truck has had quite a bit of mx done this was a Ft Polk truck. New hydraulic motors for crane, new hydraulic lines here and there. Biggest thing was a new engine about 100 hours from what is currently on my hour gauge. Engine has plenty of power.
Any other suggestions?
View attachment 684835View attachment 684836
You can get the parking brake shoes relined for cheap. That being said, the stock parking brakes capability is questionable at best with the lighter tractor/cargo trucks and completely inadequate with the wreckers even on flat ground in my opinion.Well after finishing my deployment and doing some work to the truck at pick up location I decided to drive it. All brake lines and tires looked in good shape. 4 hr drive back to my place. Overall truck is in average shape. It didn't idle well went I first got it but that cleared up with fresh diesel and diesel additive. Parking brake shoes will need replaced, they are pretty worn but the good news is the crane works (see picture;don't mind liquid on boom supports that's water)
To do list for now is:
- fix front winch; broke shear pin
- fix rear winch; expect broke shear pin wound too tight
- respool all winches
- fix electric shut off; currently disconnected
- seat covers
- general mx; oil, hoses, belts
From what I can tell from the military mx records the truck has had quite a bit of mx done this was a Ft Polk truck. New hydraulic motors for crane, new hydraulic lines here and there. Biggest thing was a new engine about 100 hours from what is currently on my hour gauge. Engine has plenty of power.
Any other suggestions?
View attachment 684835View attachment 684836
I second that one,,, had mine relined for around $125 and used them for about a week,, found out that if they were adjusted enough to work on flat ground or a mild grade, then they would rub and burn on the drum running down the highway... thus they are backed of now. still toying with the idea of an air can to open them and close them for parking operations.... hopeing a set of air axles comes along first... he he he he...(thanks for re-inventing the wheel Red)You can get the parking brake shoes relined for cheap. That being said, the stock parking brakes capability is questionable at best with the lighter tractor/cargo trucks and completely inadequate with the wreckers even on flat ground in my opinion.
Off to a solid start
hahaha yea swapping the axles is easier than swapping the backing plates like I did. The parking/emergency brakes provided by the air brake conversion is worth it, not cheap but worth it. About $900 in fittings, valves and hoses on my setup.hopeing a set of air axles comes along first... he he he he...(thanks for re-inventing the wheel Red)
Either the dual circuit upgrade with pinion brakes as parking/emergency brakes, or swapping to air brakes are both good viable options. I went with the conversion to m939 series air brakes because I got the wheel ends (drums, backing plates, shoes, etc) in a trade. Lots of details and pictures in this thread about it https://www.steelsoldiers.com/showthread.php?132200-quot-Rescued-quot-M816-Wrecker/page46 Also I did not copy the m939 brake plumbing, simplified it and used regular commercial valves.@Red - just a curious question as to why you chose full air brakes vs something like a hydro boosted brake system? Thinking of future upgrades!
Yeah that's the easy way to unwind it. Otherwise 3-4 strong soldiers are needed. Some of us are setting up a little winch to pull it out with a snatch block if you have to use it alone or with just soldier B. Also set the soldier B to hold a little brake pressure when you wind in to get it to wind even.@73M819 - I figured as much for the front drum but what about the rear since it can't free spool? Hook up to a vehicle and "help" it unspool if needed?
Thanks!