Howdy folks, hopefully everyone’s year is off to a good start.
I’ve got an issue I’m struggling with on my M923A2, I’ve rebuilt my air compressor 3x.... yes, it’s getting old. Nothing special, just an SS296
Back story: air compressor Head was gummed up with crud, and it was sticky. Left me stranded in Baton Rouge during initial recovery in 2017. Used some compressed air, PB blaster, and got it freed up. No problems for a while.
20,3xx miles
1st Rebuild: was going through the power steering pump, fixing fuel leaks etc and pulled the head off the compressor, and separated the unloaded head from main head, rebuilt with all new gaskets, O-rings, and off to Texas for Hurricane Harvey I go.
24,xxx miles
2nd Rebuild: truck survived Harvey, went to GA Rally (noticed it was building air very slow) then went to Montgomery Truck Meet and it suddenly quit pumping when I pulled in the gate. Huge thanks to Wes towing me home!
Disassemble, find headgasket-unloaded gasket blown, check head on flat surface... that’s what it was.
Flat file it until it’s all flat, clean everything up, new hardware new springs new everything goes in to this Rebuild. All is perfect
27,xxx miles
3rd Rebuildcurrent as of OP)
Truck suddenly quits building air W T F
Do my typical “disconnect governor line from compressor head, squirt lube in hole, reconnect line and normally it works just fine”
It didn’t.
Scavenge some compressed air, blow down through the governor signal port, works fine to limp home. Order all new gaskets see # PAI 131430. Upon tear down, I find all gaskets are in great shape, but the 1 way O ring seen here was cracked and the sliding ?piston? that rides on it was all gummed up from the penetrant oils sprayed down the governor signal line and cooking inside head with no escape. Lesson learned
29,xxx miles
Okay, build it by the book again, at this point it has New Gaskets, O-Rings, Springs, etc spend 2 hours with sand paper strapped to machine flat surface slowly working the head until it’s flat, and ever so slightly roughed up to give grip on gasket. Then do the same thing to unloader plate that goes on top of the head. Next, lube up the O-Rings with a small dab of food Grade silicone grease, WOW it works better than ever! But I don’t trust it, I plug the ports off and do a compression test on the compressor, it’s within spec, cross hatching still intact, no carbon in chamber, should last 100,000 miles right? WRONG. Today a couple thousand miles later, I can hear it slowly engaging and not building air as fast. I know it’s going to go down again.
Tips, tricks, suggestions?
-Verify Head flatness
-Order new parts again
-clean all metal parts and polish slightly
-torque head bolts to spec with light lube on threads
What could cause a failure after going by the book, governor? Drier? A curse? I’m a competent mechanic, I can rebuild an engine, a transfer case, an automatic transmission, but this thing has me at wits end. Buying a new compressor is Not an option unless someone has a reman they can sell for cheap.
I’ve got an issue I’m struggling with on my M923A2, I’ve rebuilt my air compressor 3x.... yes, it’s getting old. Nothing special, just an SS296
Back story: air compressor Head was gummed up with crud, and it was sticky. Left me stranded in Baton Rouge during initial recovery in 2017. Used some compressed air, PB blaster, and got it freed up. No problems for a while.
20,3xx miles
1st Rebuild: was going through the power steering pump, fixing fuel leaks etc and pulled the head off the compressor, and separated the unloaded head from main head, rebuilt with all new gaskets, O-rings, and off to Texas for Hurricane Harvey I go.
24,xxx miles
2nd Rebuild: truck survived Harvey, went to GA Rally (noticed it was building air very slow) then went to Montgomery Truck Meet and it suddenly quit pumping when I pulled in the gate. Huge thanks to Wes towing me home!
Disassemble, find headgasket-unloaded gasket blown, check head on flat surface... that’s what it was.
Flat file it until it’s all flat, clean everything up, new hardware new springs new everything goes in to this Rebuild. All is perfect
27,xxx miles
3rd Rebuildcurrent as of OP)
Truck suddenly quits building air W T F
Do my typical “disconnect governor line from compressor head, squirt lube in hole, reconnect line and normally it works just fine”
It didn’t.
Scavenge some compressed air, blow down through the governor signal port, works fine to limp home. Order all new gaskets see # PAI 131430. Upon tear down, I find all gaskets are in great shape, but the 1 way O ring seen here was cracked and the sliding ?piston? that rides on it was all gummed up from the penetrant oils sprayed down the governor signal line and cooking inside head with no escape. Lesson learned
29,xxx miles
Okay, build it by the book again, at this point it has New Gaskets, O-Rings, Springs, etc spend 2 hours with sand paper strapped to machine flat surface slowly working the head until it’s flat, and ever so slightly roughed up to give grip on gasket. Then do the same thing to unloader plate that goes on top of the head. Next, lube up the O-Rings with a small dab of food Grade silicone grease, WOW it works better than ever! But I don’t trust it, I plug the ports off and do a compression test on the compressor, it’s within spec, cross hatching still intact, no carbon in chamber, should last 100,000 miles right? WRONG. Today a couple thousand miles later, I can hear it slowly engaging and not building air as fast. I know it’s going to go down again.
Tips, tricks, suggestions?
-Verify Head flatness
-Order new parts again
-clean all metal parts and polish slightly
-torque head bolts to spec with light lube on threads
What could cause a failure after going by the book, governor? Drier? A curse? I’m a competent mechanic, I can rebuild an engine, a transfer case, an automatic transmission, but this thing has me at wits end. Buying a new compressor is Not an option unless someone has a reman they can sell for cheap.