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Geoff Weeks

Pedigreed Bulldog
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Geoff Weeks last won the day on September 17 2025

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    western Iowa

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    1992 Marmon

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Community Answers

  1. I had a pump motor on an RGN. Came out of a power generating station. Had to take the center boards out of the RGN for the shaft to sit down between the rails. I remember it being heavy as well as tall. That was a big sucker!
  2. They were popular "chip" trucks for tree surgeons. So Ok when empty but loaded they struggled a bit.
  3. 505 CID, so no surprise it isn't a speed demon.
  4. Most of those had a 8.3? C Cummins. Most weren't much of problem, I remember run solenoids and wiring being being chief problems. Could be worse could be an 8.2 fuel squeezer Pontiac (whops, Detroit).
  5. older direct drive starter will spin the same direct on either polarity (as you found out). PMGR (permanent magnet gear reduction) starter will spin backwards on reverse polarity. To reverse direction on a wound field motor, you need to reverse the current in the field relative to the current in the armature. If you reverse both, they still spin the same way. With permanent magnets for the field, they will stay the way they were magnetized when the motor was made, and by reversing the flow through the armature, you have reversed the armature relative to the field, and vola, it spins the opposite direction.
  6. Sorry to hear that. I tried running 300 hp with today's loads and speed and found it lacking, esp in the wind. With me it was an 855 Cummins, so could be built up higher. E6, I don't know, may be other can advise on what your choices are. 300 would get down the road fine on a nice calm day, get 35 mph side wind and you were down below 50, sometimes way below 50.
  7. There are many ways to go from mechanical drive to electronic output. However if the tach in question is designed to be driven from the ECM can-bus then it becomes much harder. 1990 sounds to early for that, but I'll let other comment on what they know. If the tach in question is a stand alone electronic then 1st I'd look for 3/4"x 16 TPI port on the bell housing for a pick-up to 'read" the ring gear. Failing that, there are devices that can screw into the mechanical drive on the engine and give a pulsed output that can be read by the tach. I take it you now own this truck, and it isn't something you're looking to buy? If I didn't own it, I wouldn't buy it without knowing fully what I am buying.
  8. North Korea has the "bomb" and isn't any better, but we haven't yet invaded them! Any rogue state can make a "dirty bomb" and stick it on a missile and lob it anywhere spreading contamination and death. It doesn't have to be a thermonuclear device to do major damage, doesn't have to be highly enriched. No, I don't want more countries in the nuclear club, we had an agreement, that was less than ideal, but allowed monitoring and restrictions. Trump (1) pulled out and said he was going to get a much better agreement (never did, like most of his claims) and now we are where we are. It was Trump who pulled from the agreement not Iran. As far as Afghanistan, It was Trump who negotiated the time of withdrawal. No plan, no drawdown. Biden had 5 months to come with a workable plan while still fighting. He failed, I agree but his hands were also tied by Trumps agreement with the Taliban. The pull out date was set by Trump. Unlike Trump, other presidents honor the agreements signed by their predecessors. You make an agreement you stick with what was agreed. If you want to change, you sit down and make a new agreement while honoring what you agreed to before. You don't rip up and walk away. It just shows that you can't be trusted in anything you have agreed to. Why negotiated with someone who will not do what they said the would? We have become a pariah on the world stage, someone who doesn't honor what they agree to. Being the biggest bully on the block may make short term gains briefly, but will stain you for a long long time and make it harder in the long term. In terms of the equipment left on the ground, it is a small price to pay for getting the airman back safe. May be it should have been anticipated that those planes were too heavy for the landing strip, and use smaller aircraft from the get-go. It isn't like we haven't been down this road before. 2 more lost isn't going to make much difference and I doubt those will be the last two.
  9. Can't say I've seen "MP" on the regulator, but that doesn't matter. Regulator (even those that are marked for polarity) will function fine on either. It was just the point material was place on the points that were optimized for one polarity. It made them last longer in the days where generator and point (mechanical) regulators were common. Now it doesn't pay to make and stock two regulators for every application. They make one, and figure it will last long enough. So little call for mechanical regulators these days. It has been like that for 30 years or more. I have two trucks from the 40's and both regulators are still going strong. One I'm sure is the original, the other may be or may have been replaced at some point. If you have the truck wiring stripped out and are starting from scratch, then I would wire neg ground until I found something that didn't work right (gauge). then decide if it is better to replace that with a neg ground unit or switch to positive ground.
  10. 1st look at the generator regulator, sometimes they are marked as to polarity. 2nd does the truck have a working ammeter? If so hook up the batteries and turn on all the lights, wiper, heater etc and see which way the ammeter needle moves. If it moves toward the + side of the ammeter you have the wrong side of the batteries going to ground, if it moves toward the - side, you have the correct side grounded. There is very little to do to switch from one polarity to the other on the old generator system trucks. Everything will function just fine on the reverse polarity with the exception of some electric gauges, most will read correctly but some types will read backwards. Of course any modern radios will be damaged with the wrong polarity. Alternators will be damaged, but not generators. Once you have determined which polarity, all you need to do is "polarize" the generator. This is most easily done at the regulator. With the engine off, jump momentarily from the "bat" terminal to the "A" or gen (not the F or field) terminal to establish the magnetism in the field poles shoes of the generator. That is it! If you still can figure out what it was from the get go, choose one polarity (I would suggest neg ground as it will make any accessories easier) and set it up for that polarity.
  11. Thanks for the update.
  12. NTC NT88
  13. I got 1.3m out of original build on an 855 Cummins. The rest is hard to say as they were all overhauled at some point before I got them. At 1.3m it had no problem running, just a problem keeping oil off the outside, it leaked from just about every gasket. I ended up doing an out of chassie overhaul on it. ($1500 in parts). AFAIK it is still running today.
  14. So you are saying it has been apart before? Still that isn't all a bad thing. things replaced before they cause more damage.
  15. Like Joey, I would oil the bushing and push the pin through without the piston then see how much if any "wiggle" the pin has. I had a job that required me to "break all the rules" of engine building. I found that you can get years of good results with used parts, even those swapped from another used engine. Ideal, no, but it taught me that perfection can be a bad thing just as wear can. I have pulled dry liners out of one block to be inserted into another. I have replaced broken valve springs caused by excessively worn valve guide, on a hot engine on the side of the road, to have it go a few more year before the head of the valve dropped. The repair was only supposed to last the "season" and the head was supposed to come off. Promises made but not kept by the owner.
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