Ellis6
New member
- 21
- 4
- 3
- Location
- Oregon City, Oregon
Hi - I'm a long time lurker and first time poster. A couple years ago I bought a 1975 M45A2 WO/W tanker to use as a water tender for my remote forest property in Western Oregon. The truck belonged to the U.S. Forest Service and according to a sticker on the dash was stationed at Elk River in Idaho.
I purchased the the truck a couple years ago in Spokane Washington and had it transported back to my shop in Canby Oregon. The tires were extremely weathered NDT's and the brakes were leaking big time, so I wasn't able to drive the truck prior to tearing in to it, other than around the parking lot. The truck is an LDT 465 and has an air shift transfer case.
Last year I pulled the truck into my shop to service the brakes and check the wheel bearings. All six wheel cylinders were leaking, as were many of the axle seals. Basically, the thing was a mess, and it hadn't been shown any love in quite awhile. On the bright side, the truck is rust free and the engine starts within a split second of hitting the starter.
i stripped the brakes and axles / hubs off all three axles and spent a ton of time cleaning. I've never seen so much grease and crap. I collected all new seals, wheel cylinders, brake shoes, hardware kits with springs, and a new master cylinder. Fortunately the air pack (short version) was recently replaced and looked as new inside.
Now to the problem: when I put the front axles back in, I got a funky noise when I rotated the left axle. I wondered if I had the axles swapped inadvertently, so I swapped them and determined they were in correctly to begin with. I called it a day and went home to read this forum looking for threads on axle issues.
After a bunch of reading, I had a hunch the spiders were toast, and decided to drain the front axle when I got back to work on it today. I expected to get a bunch of metal junk when I drained the gear lube, but to my amazement there was no metal, at all. The magnetic drain plug had the usual "fines" attached, but nothing of any substance. The gear oil was not milky, and was used but clean. The drain plug had not been out in a while as it was caked with crud on the outside, so it's unlikely a PO drained and refilled to hide a problem.
I was actually stumped to find the oil clean, as there was definitely something wrong with the internals. The truck is up on stands with all wheels off. When I rotate the front drive shaft by hand, the front axles rotate in opposite directions as they should. When you rotate the drive shaft by hand and hold one axle stationary the other axle rotates as normal.
Here's what has me stumped: when you rotate the left axle, there's a clunk at the same point every revolution. I'm working by myself, so in order to see how the axles are rotating I fastened a paint stir stick to the drive flange on each axle to act as flags I could watch. When I rotate the front drive shaft, the left axle actually stops rotating at the same point it was making the clunk, and the right axle continues to rotate. There's obviously a bit of a bind at the point in rotation where it clunks.
So, I have come to conclusion, for lack of a better explanation that the spiders are damaged and failing but not yet broken. My plan is to finish assembly and defer the fix to a future date. I have lockout hubs for the front, so I can drive the truck 4x6 mode, use 6x6 mode in an emergency, and then next winter pull the center chunk and repair. This truck has already been the model of "slippery slope" and I have had it apart way longer than intended. I need it to haul water for fire protection this summer, which I don't need 6x6 mode for, and if I pull the chunk now I'm afraid the truck will be apart thru this coming summer.
I work slow, and don't have as much time to work on the truck as I'd like, otherwise I'd pull I the chunk now, but don't want to miss another fire season.
Any ideas or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Dirk
I purchased the the truck a couple years ago in Spokane Washington and had it transported back to my shop in Canby Oregon. The tires were extremely weathered NDT's and the brakes were leaking big time, so I wasn't able to drive the truck prior to tearing in to it, other than around the parking lot. The truck is an LDT 465 and has an air shift transfer case.
Last year I pulled the truck into my shop to service the brakes and check the wheel bearings. All six wheel cylinders were leaking, as were many of the axle seals. Basically, the thing was a mess, and it hadn't been shown any love in quite awhile. On the bright side, the truck is rust free and the engine starts within a split second of hitting the starter.
i stripped the brakes and axles / hubs off all three axles and spent a ton of time cleaning. I've never seen so much grease and crap. I collected all new seals, wheel cylinders, brake shoes, hardware kits with springs, and a new master cylinder. Fortunately the air pack (short version) was recently replaced and looked as new inside.
Now to the problem: when I put the front axles back in, I got a funky noise when I rotated the left axle. I wondered if I had the axles swapped inadvertently, so I swapped them and determined they were in correctly to begin with. I called it a day and went home to read this forum looking for threads on axle issues.
After a bunch of reading, I had a hunch the spiders were toast, and decided to drain the front axle when I got back to work on it today. I expected to get a bunch of metal junk when I drained the gear lube, but to my amazement there was no metal, at all. The magnetic drain plug had the usual "fines" attached, but nothing of any substance. The gear oil was not milky, and was used but clean. The drain plug had not been out in a while as it was caked with crud on the outside, so it's unlikely a PO drained and refilled to hide a problem.
I was actually stumped to find the oil clean, as there was definitely something wrong with the internals. The truck is up on stands with all wheels off. When I rotate the front drive shaft by hand, the front axles rotate in opposite directions as they should. When you rotate the drive shaft by hand and hold one axle stationary the other axle rotates as normal.
Here's what has me stumped: when you rotate the left axle, there's a clunk at the same point every revolution. I'm working by myself, so in order to see how the axles are rotating I fastened a paint stir stick to the drive flange on each axle to act as flags I could watch. When I rotate the front drive shaft, the left axle actually stops rotating at the same point it was making the clunk, and the right axle continues to rotate. There's obviously a bit of a bind at the point in rotation where it clunks.
So, I have come to conclusion, for lack of a better explanation that the spiders are damaged and failing but not yet broken. My plan is to finish assembly and defer the fix to a future date. I have lockout hubs for the front, so I can drive the truck 4x6 mode, use 6x6 mode in an emergency, and then next winter pull the center chunk and repair. This truck has already been the model of "slippery slope" and I have had it apart way longer than intended. I need it to haul water for fire protection this summer, which I don't need 6x6 mode for, and if I pull the chunk now I'm afraid the truck will be apart thru this coming summer.
I work slow, and don't have as much time to work on the truck as I'd like, otherwise I'd pull I the chunk now, but don't want to miss another fire season.
Any ideas or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Dirk