Alright time for the
After
Action
Review.
Picked the truck up from Donny around 1430 ish. Went over and made sure all tires were at pressure and Donny was nice enough to grease all u-joints for me.
Put the batteries in, I was worried about them moving around, and they did on a bump which damaged a cell in one of the batteries.
Left Donny's and stopped at a gas station and topped off the left tank. It took 15.04 gallons.
Left the gas station, and headed to my buddies house on Fort Sam Houston. I stopped at a truck wash on my way and washed out the truck and the engine bay so I could see if any leaks started to happen.
Made it to his house and knew I was having problems with the batteries as the voltage gauge was doing the funky chicken.
Once at his house, I pulled the battery box cover and saw the problem, the cross over cable wore down the heat shrink over the connector and allowed it to ark out.
Went through several problem solving solutions to get her running again, and determined I had a bad battery.
Jumped the truck off in the morning and headed to wally world. Bought a new battery, put it in, strapped them down and was good to go.
Said my "see you again" and headed for the house.
Stopped at a TA right outside San Antonio and put 53.415 gallons total both tanks. Ate a little breakfast, and got back on the road.
I decided to stop every 2 hours to allow the NDT's to cool down and my back to relax a little.
Stopped for lunch around 1430 then got back on the road.
Hit Beaumont right at 1800 and boy was that fun, bumper to bumper traffic. Now up to this point I hadn't had any problems with other drivers on the road. Lot of looks, waves from the truck drivers.
Now I hadn't hollered at any drivers, or used any special hand signals at this point but I ended up hollering at a driver that decided she wanted to put about a foot between her front bumper and my rear end while going up hill at a dead stop.
The truck driver behind her started laughing as I proceeded to tell her if she like the current ride height of her car then I wouldn't advise getting so close behind something that weighs 18000 pounds. She kept a nice buffer distance after that once she realized I move a little back before I go forward on the uphills.
After that the trip was pretty uneventful the rest of the way. I did drive in to some rain, and after all my preparations I forgot to pack hose clamps. After a quick stop at a truck stop, picked up a pack of hose clamps, fixed the windshield wiper flex hose to let the windshield down I was golden.
Now, Texas has decent roads, Louisiana not so. Once I got in to Lafayette my trip decided to become a little bit more bouncy. I hit one bump so hard the transfer went in to neutral, made the pucker factor go up a little. Once I realized what happened I pulled off to the side of the road, put it back in high and got going again. From then on out if I hit a bump I grabbed the transfer handle just in case.
I did have one car honk it's little horn at me, but I equate it to stupidity, you'll see why in the pictures.
So what did I learn from this trip?
No matter how much preparation you do you will always forget something. I planned this trip for a whole month and still forgot some little things.
Luckily I didn't have to use the tools to much, especially the tire changing ones.
Sunscreen and baby powder should have been brought and used. My left arm looks like snookie, and well lets just say baby powder in a key area would have helped a little.
Now before anyone says you should have read the tm, I did, I even brought it with me, and the lube order.
I didn't take any pictures along the way, my buddy did get some of the truck in the walmart parking lot before I headed out, I'll have him email them to me so I can post them.
So what is the plan for the truck? Well, slowly it will be restored to it's original right off the factory line condition.
Now, pro's and con's.
Pro's:
I enjoy these vehicles. I miss driving them, so finally owning one is a pro to me.
It's big, it's green, it's so fluffy I wanna die!
Con's:
Spring suspension, mixed with driving bobtail equals bouncy uncomfortable ride.
Noisy.
No air conditioner, although except for the stop and go traffic I was good. Cracked the front windshield to the first detent, opened the drivers window and the foot vent and I was comfortable.
Would I do it again, of course.
I think I covered everything. The odometer had 19098 on it when I left, and in my drive way it shows 19659. Thats 561 miles and I still have about an 1/8 in each tank. The sending units need to be replaced in each tank.
Overall it was a good trip.
If you have never driven anything bigger than a class 3 vehicle (F350) then for the love of all that is holy please for your safety and the squirrels around you get some training before driving one. I cannot stress this enough. A split second mistake could mean a the difference between you and a minivan full of nuns. I have thousands of miles behind similar trucks, fire trucks, 939 series, PLS, and the big daddy 1070, so I know how to drive them.
The fuzzy dice were with my my first deployment in my truck the entire time, so I felt it was only fair they accompany me on this ride, and all future ones.