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I have a known good set of injectors we can put i n to see if that's your problem.
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Thanks for the offer, It will be a little while before I'm at that point, but thank you sincerely.I have a known good set of injectors we can put i n to see if that's your problem.
I used the same carrier that I used to get my two 931s home and after doing some improvements and reinforcement it worked like a charm. The guys at the lot where the truck had been sitting were super nice and they just lifted the front end of the M928 with one of there wreckers and I backed underneath and they set it down in my carrier. Once I pulled the rearmost drive shaft just for peace of mind it towed as nice and stable as I could ask for, I'm pretty sure it would have been stable up to whatever speed I wanted to go. One thought on my carrier vs a lowboy trailer is with my carrier I probably do have quite a bit of aerodynamic drag with the cab sitting up as high as it does that I wouldn't have if I had the towed truck on a lowboy. The top of the M928 cab was about 12' 6" high.I remember that set up. Wondering how the rear overhang will work out.
Recovery,The rear overhang dragging the ground can be compensated by suspending the fwd rear axle as high as possible. Note avatar, I have some experience!
I did get it home just 3 days ago but I still haven't looked inside the motor yet.did you ever get the truck home?
It takes just as long to pull them together as a motor trans combo than just the trans itself. Also makes em putting it back together easierWell I know that it has been awhile but I finally got a chance to work on the truck again and I figured that I would post an update. With the other issues that I had with the truck long the suspect compressor and the minor knocking I assumed that whatever had let go would be related but it looks as if it is not. So I pulled the compressor off, which has some bolts on the back side that are a real PITA to get loose, and it was actually fine. So then I did something that I wish that I had thought to do before. I had my father bump the starter while I was under the truck and feeling around and I discovered that the major knock was coming from the rear of the motor, in fact it was coming from the bellhousing. I pulled the inspection plate off of the passenger side of the bellhousing and the front of the flywheel has obvious nicks and dings where it has been hitting something. I noticed in the TM it talks about the possibility of dropping bolts for the torque converter in there and that they would cause and obstruction so now I almost wonder it one of those backed out and is now in there jamming up the flywheel. I guess my next move will be to pull the transmission and see what I find but who knows, that may be another year or two down the road.
On a related note, for those of you that have pulled transmissions from these was it easier to pull the whole motor and trans as an assembly out of the front (I have a wrecker for the lifting) or drop the transmission by itself out the bottom? I saw a picture where someone was using a chain hoist through the access panel in the cab to drop one. Any special problems or things to look out for when pulling these motors/transmissions? Thanks in advance.