Monthly Archives: January 2020

Nary A Drip Nor A Drop . .


After I got home this afternoon I went to the back of the rig while Jan cranked up the engine. I wanted to be outside when she first started up, so I was on the phone with her in case there was a catastrophic failure so she could shut the engine off immediately.

But when nothing untoward had happened after 5 minutes, I came back inside and bumped it up to high-idle and let it run for about 35 more minutes. Then after shutting down, I went back outside to take a look.

And I was very happy to see nary a drip nor a drop.

Of course I never found any leaks the four other times I’ve done this while working on the problem. I guess we’ll know for sure when we do our test drive next Sunday.

Crossing my fingers.

Police vehicles tow a detached car axle on a highway.

This weekend looks to be a quiet one for a change, with maybe a movie on Sunday. Probably Knives Out which is getting really good reviews.


Thought For The Day:

When killing someone with kindness doesn’t work, try a crowbar. Your results may vary.

etye

And Now We Wait And See . . .


I was outside and under the rig a little after 1pm to reinstall our rig’s gasket/oil adapter head/filter combination, and hopefully finally fix this long-term pesky oil leak.

The only problem I had was keeping the gasket aligned with the adapter head.

Police vehicles tow a detached car axle on a highway.

It’s hard to tell from the photo but the gasket and the adapter head are keyed and the bolt holes only line up in one position.

When I installed it the last time the gasket was stuck to the adapter head with the Permatex stuff so I had no problem with it shifting around. But without the sealer I had to just get one bolt started very loosely, and then used a long screwdriver to move the gasket into the right spot and then installed another bolt.

After I had all four installed and snugged down with my standard ratchet, I set my torque wrench to 20# and tighten the bolts until the ‘click’.

Police vehicles tow a detached car axle on a highway.

Next, after I took a break, I filled my new oil filter with oil and back under rig, I lifted the filter into the place and got it started after a few tries. The real problem with this is that the filter + oil weighs about 10 pounds, and holding it overhead with one hand is not exactly easy. But finally I did get it started and tightened down by hand.

Then I used my filter strap wrench to do the final 3/4 turn to snug it down tight. And I was done.

A couple of our blog readers suggested that I let things set for 24 hours or so before I crank it up for a leak test. So since I’m not in any real hurry I’ll wait until tomorrow to give a high-idle (1000rpm) test for 30 minutes or so.

I had originally planned to do our 120 test drive this coming Sunday, but now I think will wait until Sunday week, the 28th.

And then we’ll see.

If it all looks well, we plan on heading up to Alabama for a family and friends visit. Really looking forward to it.



Thought For The Day:

A Little High and To The Left 

Police vehicles tow a detached car axle on a highway.

jkhkjhk