freedhardwoods
Deeply Rooted
I was looking for an old work truck and found this - a 64' 3/4 ton with a dump bed. I've been wanting a dump truck for a long time. Manual windows, brakes, and steering and no fancy gadgets or computer to fiddle with. The odometer says 75,000, and from the looks of the truck, that might be original miles. I paid $1400 for it.
It needs some attention on the brakes (it pulls to the left), steel bed (needs rebuilt), lights fixed, cooling system (?) and gas line/fuel pump(?) (see below).
The previous owner said it was full of gas, but the gauge said empty. I stopped at the first gas station. The nozzle kicked off three times and I could hear the gas in the filler neck before I got a gallon in it. (That should have raised a red flag if I had been thinking)
As I was driving it home late Saturday, I noticed it was running a little hotter than it should. I stopped to look under the hood, and that's when I noticed someone put the wrong fan on. It was blowing forward, and as you can see in the pic, the exhaust is pretty close to the fan. That probably didn't help cool it very well. Sitting on the side idling brought the temp down a little.
A couple miles later, it just died. It would run if you poured gas down the carb. I thought it might have vapor locked, but I've never had a vehicle do that before, so I was in new territory if that was the problem. I let it set 45 minutes, but it still wouldn't run on its own.
I didn't have any tools, parts stores were closed, and I had to get up early (3 am) on Sunday, so I called a tow truck and let them take it home.
I checked the entire fuel system and decided the problem was in the tank. When I tried to siphon the gas out so I could get the tank out -
IT WAS EMPTY!!!!!!
I pulled it up to my gas tank with a straight nozzle and hand pump, and put in close to 20 gallons. I pulled it up to the shop again and walked around to the passenger side.
Gas was dripping out of the cab (The tank is in the cab behind the seat).
Next I siphoned the gas out like I started to do in the first place.
That was enough "fun" on the truck for Saturday. I went and bought a tiller.
I have talked to several people that say old ford tanks were notorious for kicking off automatic nozzles making you think they were full.
It needs some attention on the brakes (it pulls to the left), steel bed (needs rebuilt), lights fixed, cooling system (?) and gas line/fuel pump(?) (see below).
The previous owner said it was full of gas, but the gauge said empty. I stopped at the first gas station. The nozzle kicked off three times and I could hear the gas in the filler neck before I got a gallon in it. (That should have raised a red flag if I had been thinking)
As I was driving it home late Saturday, I noticed it was running a little hotter than it should. I stopped to look under the hood, and that's when I noticed someone put the wrong fan on. It was blowing forward, and as you can see in the pic, the exhaust is pretty close to the fan. That probably didn't help cool it very well. Sitting on the side idling brought the temp down a little.
A couple miles later, it just died. It would run if you poured gas down the carb. I thought it might have vapor locked, but I've never had a vehicle do that before, so I was in new territory if that was the problem. I let it set 45 minutes, but it still wouldn't run on its own.
I didn't have any tools, parts stores were closed, and I had to get up early (3 am) on Sunday, so I called a tow truck and let them take it home.
I checked the entire fuel system and decided the problem was in the tank. When I tried to siphon the gas out so I could get the tank out -
IT WAS EMPTY!!!!!!
I pulled it up to my gas tank with a straight nozzle and hand pump, and put in close to 20 gallons. I pulled it up to the shop again and walked around to the passenger side.
Gas was dripping out of the cab (The tank is in the cab behind the seat).
Next I siphoned the gas out like I started to do in the first place.
That was enough "fun" on the truck for Saturday. I went and bought a tiller.
I have talked to several people that say old ford tanks were notorious for kicking off automatic nozzles making you think they were full.