CUCVLOVER
Active member
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- west Tennessee, just outside Milan
Well the green machine is back in business. Brand New transmission and in a couple days some tires.
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
No, your not dumb. In fact your pretty smart to look for the problem before it became a "REALLY" big problem. A lot of people would just let it slid thinking it was nothing.In this case, it was moving that front battery from it's stock location back to reside parallel to the rear battery.
The slope of the hood clears the rear battery by inches but was nearly in contact with the front battery terminal.
I bought the truck in Oregon and drove it home to Wyoming.
But I only started wheeling it offroad recently.
The additional flex created by 33 inch tires probably contributed.
It wasn't like I was railing along at speed.
I was creeping in low range about 3 mph.
I should know better.
It all looked so nice and the battery tray had been done along with an LMC headlight box.. I made the mistake of getting complacent and trusting someone elses work.
My fault.
Lucky it is just a few holes on the inner sheet metal of the hood and not through the hood or worse.
I am a dummy.
That is also a very good thing to always check. I had a diesel tractor that caught fire due to a small fuel leak on the exhaust manifold. Thankfully we where able to put out the fire. Just smothered it with dirt. Scared the crap out of us though !I look for fuel on the motor and other places that fuel can get to and heat well get to it. Found some fuel leaks and have fixed them and now looking at other places the they have fixed before I got the truck.
I've had 3 fires before. First one was my mom's Daihatsu Cuore which I was driving after an oil leak fix. Caught fire at the cooling fan connector.No, your not dumb. In fact your pretty smart to look for the problem before it became a "REALLY" big problem. A lot of people would just let it slid thinking it was nothing.
One of my biggest "bugaboos" is electrical fires. Having had a big one in my past. So I'm always smelling the vehicle which drives my family nuts. I will ask "do you smell that ? " and they usually say "No Dad, there's nothing there. It's your imagination" .
Burn injuries are horrible, not that any injury isn't.I have been on fire in a racecar, not cool. Fire system and good safety equipment saved me as well as practicing egress from the car many many times just in case. I don't own a vehicle with combustibles in it that does not have at least a halon fire extinguisher in it. Overkill perhapts but I don't want to be on fire again.
Same here, plus often a regular powder extinguisher for others.I don't own a vehicle with combustibles in it that does not have at least a halon fire extinguisher in it.
Big seal installer is an easy short piece of 2 X 4 layed flat and hit to drive seal in. 2 x 6 will work also. Walnut, pine, fir, or oak. Anything that lays flat.Well I attempted and succeeded in putting in a rear axle hub oil seal on the1028. However I seemed to have bent the seal portion and ruined my new seal when I installed it. I put probably thirty miles on it today and came home to oil slung all over my rear rotor and up and down the inside of the tire. Tomorrow's chore is to find a big seal installer and a new seal and put a second one on. Hopefully without goobering it up this time.
It's all looking real good. nice.Mounted my bridge plate. Thanks rocket990.
Added some bumper numbers