There were a host of maintenance actions pending on Thor. In general, the truck has been quite reliable, but it is a 1988 model. While it has not had many miles (indeed the odometer was 30,000 km when I bought it in 2010 and only 81K now) what happens with older trucks is that everything rubber has issues. Rubber in this case means tires, hoses, belts and seals. The tires are new, installed just before this trip. Belts were recently replaced. But, seals are an issue. We had previously experienced some issues with the clutch in 2011 and 2012. Rebuild kits were installed in the master cylinder. But, the issues went away and then came back. So, in anticipation of this maintenance cycle, I purchased replacements for master cylinder, slave cylinder and flex hose. Additionally, I purchased a rebuild kit for the brake master cylinder and replacements for each of the wheel cylinders as well as new flex lines for the front and rear. Generally stated, all the critical rubber parts were going to be replaced irrespective of whether they were CURRENTLY producing issues. In addition, all of the "normal" maintenance actions like oil change, fuel filter change, gear oil changes and adjustments were planned. Finally, our air conditioning compressor had failed shortly after it was installed in 2012 so it was to be addressed as well.
All of
these actions were to be performed at Rob Pickering's shop in La
Junta, CO.
The photos below are what we saw.
When I
arrived at Rob's on Sunday, I shot photos of some of the trucks
that he had for sale on his lot. This is a very-clean 1550
DOKA.
This
2450 DOKA came with us to the Grand Staircase.
This is
another 2450L, but a single cab. This would make an
outstanding camper platform.
This is
a U400.
Another
DOKA.
A very
late model U500.
Yet
another 2450L but this one is configured as a fire truck with a
dozer blade on front.
A
snowplow configured 1450.
A 406
with snow plow.
Rob also
sells used Hagglund all-terrain vehicles.
I am not
sure of the model number of this unit.
On
Monday, we started on the maintenance actions. First up
was the clutch flex line. Rob and Edwin attack the line
and it was, of course, in a hard to reach area.
The
slave cylinder for the clutch was removed.
We
opened the clutch slave cylinder and found rust pits inside.
The pits would account for the symptoms that I have been
observing. This component was replaced in full.
The RPM
limiter on the motor was relaxed to 2950 RPM. The fuel
filter was changed during the process.
The
valve cover was removed and the clearances on each of the valves
was checked and adjusted. A number were out of
specification which would have resulted in the hard, smoky
starts.
One of
our cargo baskets was removed to provide access to the battery
compartment and the brake master cylinder.
A big
chunk of the service was performed on Rob's heavy-duty
lift. Note the dual jacks built into the lift. The
rear tires were removed to allow access to the brake drums and
wheel cylinders.
None of
the wheel cylinders were leaking, but they would be replaced
anyway. The shoes are ok as are the drums.
During
lunch break, we inspected Rob's Lamborghini Diablo.
A fast
V12 motor.
Dirty
inside but that is because there is still body work underway.
Back to
the grind. A new wheel cylinder before installation.
The
brake master cylinder is hiding under those reservoirs.
The wire looms above are for the camper, tire crane, tire winch
and other necessities of life.
The rear
wheels were completed and they moved on to the front axle.
The
master cylinder out on the bench for an inspection and rebuild.
Generally,
the innards looked ok. And that was good because the rebuild
kit I had was the wrong size. Close, but no cigars.
We were
able to assemble enough components for a master cylinder rebuild
from my unit and those from another 1017A that had recently been
serviced by Rob.
The air-boosted
actuator rod for the brake is the large pin on the left.
While we
were looking around Rob found 2 mounting bolts for my propane
rack that were sheared off. The nuts were gone, but the
bolts remained. These were replaced with Grade-8 bolts
with nylatch nuts.
The
truck was raised on the lift to allow access for fluid changes
and adjustments to the engine timing advance.
The air
conditioning compressor was removed and inspected. The
magnetic clutch bearings had seized and roasted the clutch.
The
compressor was LIKELY undamaged, but there was no way to
tell. In the end, we decided to replace the whole unit.
The
clutch bearings were toast. Rob surmised that when the
unit was ordered as a 24V unit, that a 12V compressor was
included, thus causing the early failure.
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Photos and Text Copyright Bill Caid 2013,
all rights reserved.
For your enjoyment only, not for commercial use.