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Vladislav

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Posts posted by Vladislav

  1. On 2/25/2024 at 4:31 AM, 1961H67 said:

    I saw a YouTube video on this LJ ,, it was posted about 5 years ago. It looks like the truck was being parted out, the video may have been taken in NE Pennsylvania. If anyone recognizes it please let me know, Here is a screenshot of the video, Many Thanks. Dean 

    IMG_1756.png

    I saw that truck in person in the summer of 2018. But don't know the owner. It was in PA indeed, parked in a yard near a local highway. The fenders were not absolutely perfect but quite good. The chassis looked cut in the middle with new longer rear section welded up. If it's up for parts definitely worth checking out.

    There was a huge and neat looking RD800 parked in that same yard. White cab with black fenders, hooked to a low boy trailer. I'm pretty sure I saw that truck's photo posted on the forum once a couple years back and too probably by the owner. That's a possible way to count out any contact info on the L-model.

    • Like 2
  2. You may also use construction foam if want to build a channel. Polyurethane foam doesn't stand out from air really much. Let some foam to get out from a can, wait for dry up, than cut into the shape you need with a paper knife. 

    Speaking old wood I extracted from the hinge areas I filled the spots completely with new fiberglass. You get strength similar to a hockey stick handle. Some weight adds on but that's right above the hinges so no issue when opening. The amount of resin and fiber stock grows up that's true. But seems insufficient in relation to the worth of your labour. 

    • Like 1
  3. Welcome to the forum!

    Parts search may be real adventure sometimes with big respect from a customer if the turnout is good. Not big matter you supply needs of the shop guys or work at the desk. And even no matter you work at a particular brand dealership. Parts sales experience gives you universal skill to be able to sell parts for anything:) Just keep an open mind paying attention to nuances and especially to complicated cases. Experience grows up not when you grap a marked part from a shelf and give it into customrer's hands but when you also point in your mind what that part was for and the case it became needed. At least in general. Make your brain working while other folks just play their smartphones and you will find out yourself standing out pretty soon!

    Vlad

    • Like 1
  4. On 2/2/2024 at 4:29 AM, JoeH said:

    I don't think you'll have any thermal expansion issues by adding ribs underneath your hood.  If I get a minute I'll take a picture of the inside of my sailboat.  It has cedar ribs that are fiberglassed to the floor to help give it strength.  It basically creates a fiberglass box channel that gives structure to the otherwise flat panel.

    You could fiberglass in plastic pipe or even foam insulation for water pipes. Metal is going to add a decent amount of weight to the hood, which will make it harder to open, but you don't need anything heavy, just something to hold the shape for the fiberglass resin to set.

    Original R-model hood (two ones I butchered up) had wooden inserts in the area hinge bolts fit and up high to form reinforcement channels. Put there exactly for the reason you mentioned - to build a shape of fiberglass being applied onto something. Guess if cedar is used there they would serve well not shorter than your sail vessel. In fact the restovers looked like fir or other relatively soft wood so years of water penetration followed to complete decay.

    Wood doesn't expant as much as metals by warm so must work well with epoxy fiber. I'm sure if you're looking for extreme strength metal inserts could be used either. But with some good portion of head scratching to avoid possible thermal destructions.

  5. Interesting sleeper definitely. My thoughts were of another kind though. Just spin in my mind a way to fit the sleeper right on the winch. Isn't that impossible? The winch would keep its place being hidden under the bunk with a big access door in the rear wall. And the matress floor can be (?) positioned high enough to clear up the drum. Would be a cool setup on my mind. But 1st issue I foresee is correspondence of the openings in the cab and the bunk. And the 2nd is alignement of the side countour of the cab and bunk may be lost.

  6. 2 hours ago, fjh said:

    Vlad AS I mentioned the situation compounds and any number of scenarios is possible ! not sure this about other engines the 8 665 866 also had the same issue BUT it was two valve ! The seat would just come loose and make a pop pop sound when being shut down , being a bigger seat it would not break up or fall out the four valve seat was much smaller more fragile ! It is defiantly not pretty when it happens and the chain of events expensive!  

    Thank you for the lesson! :)

  7. So do E9's drop a seat just after the engine shut off with no a few minutes idling before that?? Honestly dropped seat idea sends shivers up my spine relating to any vehicle. Regardless I've never experienced such "luck". BTW if it's fallen could it hang on the valve plate for some while before fracturing and meeting the piston and liner walls?

    The sequince idea looks realistic. So lay outs of the same kind with car engines.

  8. 4 hours ago, Licensed to kill said:

    True but will only be an issue if using the rear from the CH as the locating dowel pins would need to be moved inboard. If just using the suspension and putting the original diff under it, shouldn't cause any issues in that regard. 

    I minded putting a complete suspension so meeting a trouble with points you attach brackets to the frame rails. Probably simple spicers might be used but that should be kept in mind.

  9. The picture must have been taken by a professional photographer. So the gunner was posing for it. This way the scene may be a bit more spectacular than it was in real. But on the other hand during a battle actual poses could be even more spectacular than on the photo. My hat's off to the job those guys did.

    • Like 2
  10. You don't need to remove all that surface rust if you're going to sandblast the whole cab before painting. Sure if you don't see a 10 years gap in time. Actually strange to see that much of it as long as you work in a shop not outside. Is the compartment dry enough? Or do you do wet sanding? And what is the reason at all you do that? 

    To me it looks at least two ways may be chosen at this point. 1st you remove all the items off the cab, repair areas where actual rust through or dents take place, than sandblast the whole thing and bring its further faith into the hands of paint guy. 2nd is you sand off a certain area, for the best a portion of a cab with some borders, than mask the rest and apply primer, self etch or epoxy, depending on the religion you prefere to go along, and continue working on the next portion. This way no need in media blast is seen, or possibly locally only where deep rust was detected you can't sand off. Then paint guy will scotch-bright or sand your primer up and put his other layers over it.

    • Like 1
  11. On 2/20/2024 at 9:58 PM, Hans Remmers said:

    They are asking $30k, it's too high for me but the market here hasn't fallen back to reality here yet. If it was mine I'd probably ask that much too.

    With no torque rod in place and parked in that pool?

    May take longer to get rid of than I supposed initially.

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