
Twenty years ago I was working as a tech in Salem, OR when I met the GMC Motorhome. The low access height and fantastic visibility grabbed me right away. Plus, a definite cuteness factor. Definitely a change from the rest of the motorhome crowd. Of course, there is the "slight" drawback that crawling under it is, um, difficult. "Real" trucks are so much easier...About a year ago, I went on my last backpacking trip. The mountain informed me that I could no longer haul 30 lbs of gear on my back for very long without having to rest. Then there was the couple, looking fresh as daisies, who, I learned, were hiking back to their RV at the park campground. Somehow, sleeping on the ground was much less fun after that.
It wasn't long before I was looking into other options and perusing want ads. I remembered the GMC and researched its history, watched some videos. You know the drill.
Suddenly, there it was, a GMC Motorhome for sale! Olds 455 - check. 26 foot - check. Rear bed - check. Needs work - check.
In fact, the dash had been broken out in preparation for a CIP dash install. Turns out, it was a project that the owner, sadly, died in the middle of. It also appeared the vehicle received a thorough mechanical rehab prior to his purchase as well as numerous appearance upgrades. In other words, a medium risk, high gain opportunity to own a GM classic for someone with my unique set of automotive technician skills. Plus, I got to do it!
It took 8 months of weekends and other spare time and I learned a great deal about a "great many things", most of which I fixed or modified. I have just returned for my first real outing - an overnight to the Washington coast over the 4th. Motorhome ran very well, though I am still messing with the timing. For some reason, FiTech's ported vacuum doesn't appear until about 1/4 throttle, making it worthless for vacuum advance profile. Still, performance was everything I could hope for, just have to get rid of that ping.
I did notice something, though, that I'm hoping you all can help me with. I notice a low rumbling noise that appears at around 50 mph and gets quite loud at 60. At first, I thought it was my new front tires (agressive tread as I have a VERY steep, gravel drive), but then I noticed that my front air dam (above windshield) was vibrating and I believe that is the source of the noise. The fasteners appear to be tight. Have any of you encountered this and is there a fix?
Cheers!
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