Fresh paint on the bumperetts. My buddy also installed a new master cylinder as mine was leaking quite a bit of fluid. That stuff is too expensive to let it continue to leak out.
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Ah yes, leaking DOT 5. I had so much fun replacing the right steer brake hose I'm going to do it again..........Fresh paint on the bumperetts. My buddy also installed a new master cylinder as mine was leaking quite a bit of fluid. That stuff is too expensive to let it continue to leak out.
It's a rust-sealer like Rustoleum?Replaced springs and parts on Parking Brake and adjusted. Replaced wooden side boards on the bows with rectangular tubing and put on a new bed cover. Buzzed all small rusted spots, treated with One Step and re- camo painted those dpots
Great to hear from you Tim!!! It's been a while. Well, for me it was cost, rust and time. I worried so much about Brutus that it took some of the enjoyment out of owning him. I recently had my Jeep JK refitted with geared limited slip and deeper 3.73 gears in both axles. With the lower gears (and much better power on hills) it's a lot like driving a Deuce. And with posi, it is killer diller in snow. I even have taller, super knobby snow tires on it. Just like a mini-bobber! Battery drain huh? I once had that problem on my 1952 Dodge P/U. I found it by accident when I was installing a new heater core and fan unit. The fan power wire had a bare spot right where it went through the metal heater case. There was no grommet. I fixed that. Now his battery stays charged. It takes patience and/or luck to find a grounding problem sometimes. First, I would look for anything that is still powered up when the master switch is off. Such as an add on CB radio or something powered by an auxiliary fused connector to a positive battery post. Next, I would start inspecting for dried, cracked wires under the hood, behind the dash panel, or near the lights. Cracked wiring may be exposed to ground at some point. I think I may still have your email, but mine is owen@ptd.net. Give me a shout. I'd love to hear from you! Owen.
Hello @Dipstick !
Long time no talk... I hate to hear that you decided to let your Deuce go. It was an amazing little truck. Yeah, I know it's hard to work on these things as you get older - but what I do now is work and rest, work and rest, and so on. We had a few days of warm weather around here last week, so I did a little more chipping and scraping and painting on my M936. Went out to crank up my M1088 and it clicked. Nothing more. It has always had a slow drain on the batteries. It will crank like a dream - so long as it doesn't sit for more than a week. It was three weeks so I gotta charge the batteries. The bad part is that I have a maintainer to plug it in to, but you have to DO it...
Don't hesitate to email me.
Talk to you later.
Tim Mullaney
Hi Ahab! Yeah, I rebuilt my parking brake too. The hardest part was attaching the cable to the hand brake lever end and getting it bolted down again. I finally ran the bolts up from the bottom and duct taped the bolt heads to the underside of the floor. That enabled me to get locks and nuts on in the cab. Ya gotta watch those hand brake cables. They can rust to the inside of their jacket and make you think something is wrong with the linings or the clearance (air gap between drum and shoes).It's a rust-sealer like Rustoleum?
I installed all three spin-on fuel filters. The primary filter below the alternator even came with a water/sediment drain valve. It's a good thing to do for your MV.Oil filters are not too much a problem for me so far, however the fuel filters are another story. Definitely will look into a spin on set up for at least the two twin secondary filters.
SCSG I'm sure glad you didn't have a widow maker. I know I'm not THAT old, but I think I have arthritis in my ankles, which makes it harder to crawl under things. Most of the stuff I did was sitting on a concrete floor (or driveway) under my Deuce. I never used creepers, because I was always light and flexible. Not so much anymore.71 is young, I had a triple bypass at 76 (less than a month from having a widow maker had it not been treated).
Painting parts like that really makes you feel like you're making your rig better. My specialty was getting 50% of the paint or anti-seize on me. Be thankful Deuces use Dot 5. That damn Dot 3 has screwed up the paint on my 1952 Dodge more than once!Fresh paint on the bumperetts. My buddy also installed a new master cylinder as mine was leaking quite a bit of fluid. That stuff is too expensive to let it continue to leak out.
My first deuce had the thermocouple directly upstream from the exhaust gas side of the turbo. Ran 1100F and occasionally 1200F for short durations. Aluminum melts at 1425F. Had to pay attention as my pump was turned up.Not sure I agree with this. Where else but the manifold is before the turbo?
That looks good. I bet performs much better too. I left the pneumatic wipers on mine but replaced the wiper arms with ANCO and ANCO wiper blades, so much better than the stock version. Only con, need to turn the air way up to get speed on the wipers as the new arms and blades have a lot more pressure on them vs stock, but wiper upgrades on a deuce imo, priceless!Windshield Wiper Upgrade. Replaced the standard issue air wiper motors with 24V "Jeep" motors and then cut the shafts down to fit. The standard 7" blades are a joke. These motors have 3/16" bayonet mounts on the arms. So United Pacific I/N 110424 is a 13" SS blade that fits nicely.
Interesting placement of the evaporator unit. On my first deuce I went the more traditional route. Bought a hose crimping kit, a vacuum pump and ac charging gauges. Worked fairly well but I think the condenser was too small for my Phoenix Summers. Since I now have an 80A alternator I am considering one the newer 24 VDC all in one roof vent AC units.Finally installed this A/C unit that I been having for a long time just laying around. Its an electric compressor unit, I just need to get hoses for it
The 24v rooftop A/C is what I used in the humvee, the one I used in the deuce is pretty much the same thing, but it separates the compressor and condenser. I mounted the condenser on the roof and the compressor in the bed. I will duct the A/C to blow cold air from 4 different areas up front, one on each of the passenger/driver side and 2 in the middle.Interesting placement of the evaporator unit. On my first deuce I went the more traditional route. Bought a hose crimping kit, a vacuum pump and ac charging gauges. Worked fairly well but I think the condenser was too small for my Phoenix Summers. Since I now have an 80A alternator I am considering one the newer 24 VDC all in one roof vent AC units.