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speedy

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Posts posted by speedy

  1. Great transmission, but for short trips, even a 6 speed will suffice. Gears are great for hills or soft ground. But if you don't have to overcome those conditions, it's overkill. Great thing about a 12 speed is that you get 5 gears in reverse, of course, the six speed gets you that too. The Mack 9 speed is fine too. Do you have experience with shifting transmissions with multiple gears? It's an acquired skill that you may not get fully polished on short trips.

  2. Speedy,

    It was the seller who set the rules, he requested that the first couple of callers would have the first shot an that I could not come look at it untill the first caller did, so basically the seller changed the rules during the game!! An thats what pissed me off, because basically he told us we couldn't come to see it, but of course there's always someone comming in the back door an we all know what I'm talkin about

    BULLHUSK PS an like Lmack. said we already set up a meeting for Monday with a price with the 5th wheel included. so the deal was made if the first guy backed out! thats what pissed me off, I even asked him if he wanted me to send him a dep. if the first guy couldn't make it on Sunday, he said no not necessary

    Well, I guess it sucks for you. Buying and selling in private deals, or even on a dealer's lot is a crap shoot sometimes. Real Estate is especially that way - or used to be....

  3. hard to say.... If im selling something I like to take the first person with cash as he is standing there willing to give me what I want. Some times buyers get cold feet and change their mind in a matter of 5 mins. On the other hand If I said come look at it tomorrow I would not set up any other meetings for other lookers untill after you came to look and made an offer.

    Trent

    First one with cash on the dash that's acceptable. Unless somebody is willing to put down a forfeitable deposit (or at least a portion of it) to hold it for a couple days Paypal, Credit Card, Western Union transfer to me....

  4. Lever on the column is a trolley brake. Only works thr trailer brakes. Treadle works truck and trailer brakes.

    When you pull on the trolley brake, the brake lites "should" come on-thus the switch.

    Trolley brake was used as a parking brake, but could help slow you just a bit if needed.

    The 'Trolly' brake lever (We call it the trailer brake or 'spike'), should NEVER be used as a parking brake. It can work it's way off by vibration of the engine or even simply ease off on it's own. It is not to be relied on for parking - use the buttons on the dash.

    That being said, it's main use is for braking in slippery conditions, it will help keep a tractor-trailer straight - you can also apply the pedal brake and override it to apply even more braking pressure to the trailer - this takes some experience/practice.

    It can also be used to back under a low trailer that doesn't have spring brakes, back up to the trailer, connect your air lines, pull the spike to apply the trailer brakes and then drive the truck under while the 5th wheel lifts the trailer.

  5. You should be able to get a ReMack assembly for you engine. I'm not sure of the price but I'm pretty sure it carries a warranty and is cheaper than the rebuild kit. You just have to install the end capsfrom your oil cooler on the ReMack cooler.

    I'm not sure what the costs would be, but if you have some mechanical inclination and basic tools, it's easily a DIY job.

  6. A badly out of round tire? Are the wheels unimount or daytons? Could be they are wobbling too.

    If you suspect balance, maybe rotate the outside tires 1/3 - 1/2 of a turn (or thereabouts) one at a time and test drive in between.

    Would axle alignment have anything to do with this?

  7. The North American Market mindset won't embrace cabovers. It's odd because they are far more luxurious and comfortable than the seemingly 'preferred' conventional truck, the Peterbilt.

    Kenworth has made an attempt, but It's not yet certified for road travel (crash testing, etc) it's for off- road heavy haul.

    kenworth-daf-3.jpg

  8. Our 2001 460 was, pardon the pun, a DOG!! It should have been a very powerful truck, was specced to the hilt. The engine was backed by an 18 speed. But our 400's with 15 speed tranny's (glorified 10, actually) would run circles around it. Had it in to the dealer several times, reprogrammed, dynoed it, tweaked it.... They never did bring it up to satisfaction. Finally sold it off. Gotta be some duds out there. I know of several fleets that have had very good luck with the 460. All of our 427's performed very well, way above the 460 and 400's.

    Damn near forgot about the one Mack I operate now, it's my profile pic. An MR 688 with a REED 42 Meter concrete boom pump mounted on it. It's a 460, but it suffers with the 9 speed, not enough gears to keep it in the 'sweet spot'. It weighs 80,000 lbs and a 600 RPM drop between gears is too much. A 12 speed mack or a 13 or 18 Mack or Fuller tranny would have suited it much better. But then again it doesn't make it's living running up and down the road. The transmission feeds into the 'Steibel box' (gearbox in-line with the drive shaft that disconnects the driveline and powers the powerful hydraulic pumps to operate the concrete pump. It may 'torque up' once there are more hours on it. Although it is a 2006 truck, it was new, old stock when I bought it in the fall of 2009.

  9. Perhaps Schwing has an even bigger concrete pumper in the wings?

    Concord (Concord's Website) is build ing 65M pumps on Mack MR chassis's, with 460 HP. I don't know how well they cool though.

    It's 125,000 lbs PLUS!!

    Schwing builds a 61M, Putzmeister a 63M. Pretty much all the others have 52 and 55M booms too.

    The measurement is from the ground to the tip, with the boom vertical.

    I run a 36 M and it reaches 118' straight up, and it'll reach 95' from the front bumper....the 65M Concord has double that, 190'. My 36M Schwing weighs 64,000 lbs. Pwered by 285 HP, and a mountain-eating 6 speed. :P

  10. We had a '93 CH 613 with a 400 do that back in '98. It was coming of the highway into town on a downhill off-ramp. So I'm thinking it was an engine overspeed caused by an early downshift. We hooked on to it right away & got it to the yard before the air pressure ran down. Then used another truck's wet kick to dump the end-dump, dropped the trailer, and pulled it out of the way.

    Had to get a used donor motor out of Texas. The independant mechanic we had do the work said that it was the cleanest engine swap he'd ever done. He was used to working on WAY older stuff...mostly Jimmy diesels - in farm trucks. he was plenty familiar with Mack's, as he had worked for years for an oilfeild trucking company, but this was his first experience with an electronis engine....piece of cake, he said. Took him 3 days...but he was all by himself, I figure, he did damn good. He swapped out the turbo and feul pump, cause we knoew what we had there.

  11. The truck is a sgood as you spec them. Mack has something like 7 or 9 different frame specs to choose from. Needless to say, the one with the best looking price tag isn't going to be the stiffest or strongest.

    Gone are the days of stopping by the dealership and picking out the one with the engine and transmission you like & going to work with it the next day. No sir, you gotta look at the purpose your using it for and spec it out from the ground up anymore.

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