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- Location
- Amersfoort, The Netherlands
Instead of posting in the "What have you done" thread, I decided to start this "build" thread for my friend's M1008 we are working on.
My friend, Niek, wanted a truck. I knew he liked my M1028 and his employers F250 so whenever I saw an ad of a reasonably priced truck, mainly CUCVs, I shared them with him. When I came across this one he decided to go and have a look. I went with him as I know more about them.
Truck looked good. Ran great. Owner was knowledgeable about CUCVs and 6.2s. He knew specifics you only know if you're really into these trucks and engines. Told us about the things he had done to the truck. Most notable a GM4 turbo. Restored everything except for the bed so-far. We went home to think about it some more, made an offer and picked up the truck a week later.
Unfortunately we ran into problems pretty soon after. The truck would occasionally die while driving. We cleaned the fuel filter and while bleeding the system the starter relay failed and the starter kept going. We rushed to the batteries and started to unhook the battery terminals before the starter fried, but in a hurry we unhooked in the wrong order and a wire to the drivers side alternator fried. Later I found a thread on why disconnecting in the proper order is important, can't find it right now, when I do I'll post it here.
We fixed the wire and found a bunch of crappy wiring under the dash. We cleaned that mess and did a mod similar to the Doghead relay mod.
Niek decided to take the bench out to make it easier to crawl up and under the dash. Removed the floor mats to do so. Guess what, lots of rust. At least it runs.
Some will have read about it in the "What have you done" thread, but a strange knocking/ticking sound started developing. It could be best heard from on the front side of the engine. Turned out it was the balancer hitting the waterpump. A combination of a bad balancer and I guess a cheap Chinese waterpump where the cause. The waterpump didn't have an indent on the bottom, above the balancer, like all other pumps I have seen. You can see where the balancer was hitting the waterpump in the following pictures.
The waterpump had been replaced about a year earlier. Balancer looked original.
I've read enough "horror" stories about bad balancers destroying crack shafts I had him park the truck. At that time we decided to change to a serpentine belt setup as I was building one for my Optimizer. We found a donor truck online and went and got the parts. I have tons of ideas for my own M1028 so we are putting some of those into Niek's truck. We also ordered lots of stuff from the states. Balancer, crank pulley, FlowKooler waterpump, timing set, Duramax fan, Hayden HD fan clutch, Oil coolers for engine oil and transmission oil, thermostat for transmission oil, lots of repair panels from LMC and some other goodies.
The parts where ordered a couple of weeks before Christmas so we expected to unpack them by Christmas. With Covid-19, the storm in the USA and more set backs it was February by the time the parts where delivered. We did keep the Christmas spirit alive when unpacking though.
Guess what. Rock Auto sent the wrong timing set. Pretty much put the whole project on hold. We did get to start on tearing the engine down, clean parts, paint parts, re-do/improve some wiring.
My friend, Niek, wanted a truck. I knew he liked my M1028 and his employers F250 so whenever I saw an ad of a reasonably priced truck, mainly CUCVs, I shared them with him. When I came across this one he decided to go and have a look. I went with him as I know more about them.
Truck looked good. Ran great. Owner was knowledgeable about CUCVs and 6.2s. He knew specifics you only know if you're really into these trucks and engines. Told us about the things he had done to the truck. Most notable a GM4 turbo. Restored everything except for the bed so-far. We went home to think about it some more, made an offer and picked up the truck a week later.
Unfortunately we ran into problems pretty soon after. The truck would occasionally die while driving. We cleaned the fuel filter and while bleeding the system the starter relay failed and the starter kept going. We rushed to the batteries and started to unhook the battery terminals before the starter fried, but in a hurry we unhooked in the wrong order and a wire to the drivers side alternator fried. Later I found a thread on why disconnecting in the proper order is important, can't find it right now, when I do I'll post it here.
We fixed the wire and found a bunch of crappy wiring under the dash. We cleaned that mess and did a mod similar to the Doghead relay mod.
Niek decided to take the bench out to make it easier to crawl up and under the dash. Removed the floor mats to do so. Guess what, lots of rust. At least it runs.
Some will have read about it in the "What have you done" thread, but a strange knocking/ticking sound started developing. It could be best heard from on the front side of the engine. Turned out it was the balancer hitting the waterpump. A combination of a bad balancer and I guess a cheap Chinese waterpump where the cause. The waterpump didn't have an indent on the bottom, above the balancer, like all other pumps I have seen. You can see where the balancer was hitting the waterpump in the following pictures.
The waterpump had been replaced about a year earlier. Balancer looked original.
I've read enough "horror" stories about bad balancers destroying crack shafts I had him park the truck. At that time we decided to change to a serpentine belt setup as I was building one for my Optimizer. We found a donor truck online and went and got the parts. I have tons of ideas for my own M1028 so we are putting some of those into Niek's truck. We also ordered lots of stuff from the states. Balancer, crank pulley, FlowKooler waterpump, timing set, Duramax fan, Hayden HD fan clutch, Oil coolers for engine oil and transmission oil, thermostat for transmission oil, lots of repair panels from LMC and some other goodies.
The parts where ordered a couple of weeks before Christmas so we expected to unpack them by Christmas. With Covid-19, the storm in the USA and more set backs it was February by the time the parts where delivered. We did keep the Christmas spirit alive when unpacking though.
Guess what. Rock Auto sent the wrong timing set. Pretty much put the whole project on hold. We did get to start on tearing the engine down, clean parts, paint parts, re-do/improve some wiring.
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