How can you be sitting in Big Jim right now as he is sitting in my RVPort
right now in Idaho.
Marlene Meineken
77Palm Beach
AKA BIG JIM
- ----- Original Message -----
From: Samuel Pickens
To:
Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 1999 1:53 PM
Subject: Re: GMC: GMC Front wheel Bearings
> Arch and all,
>
> Approaching one's vehicle. Familiarity breeds exempt. Exemption comes by
> knowing. How well do we know our vehicle? Have you recently purchased and
> assuming everything is OK? At the first Spring or Fall whichever comes
> first, pull the wheel, inspect the brakes and lubrication of the bearings,
> etc. If I have suspicion of anything, I have a tendency to attach an
> accelerometer and drive down the road gathering data for analysis before
> visual inspection. And/or from said analyses I may determine to replace
the
> bearing even before visual inspection. On the other hand said analyses may
> give me confidence to continue operation without visual inspection.
>
> Sorry about the rambling. Yes, I do analyses of bearings while driving
down
> the road. I've also performed testing on vehicles while on a rack. I did a
> Jaguar and determined the drive shaft was out of balance. They didn't
> believe me as they told me that was the drive shaft they just had
balanced.
> They were fully confident the DS was OK. I soured the problem to the DS
and
> maintained the transmission and hogs head were OK. The problem was
resolved
> when the DS was again balanced. Setting DS's up for race is interesting
but
> that's another topic. I have full confidence on those data.
>
> One bearing doesn't necessarily relate to the next. For example; the L
side
> can be OK while the R side is bad. Analysis can determine this. Now to the
> trick. Can this transfer from one person to another? NO! But, I believe
> basic guidelines could be established. A random starting point could be
> established; say at five g's 0-P overall.
>
> How to obtain that data. One approach is to instrument the vehicle with
> onboard monitoring. Another, portable monitoring device that could even be
> transported or swapped between GMCers. Breaking down on the highway can
> cost five days unless you're stinking, filthy rich. I only need to get the
> rich part right. One may instrument a vehicle for ~$1500 - I'm guessing
> (six transducers, cabling, electrical supply {either -18, -24 or -27
> volts}, and a digital readout). Once it has been determined that 5 g's is
> the flag point that alerts to inspection/replacement or whatever value
that
> is finally determined, then one could run with peace of mind. Lubrication
> can be a veribile, how much wet driving vs dry driving and do you drive
> through creeks? The overall approach won't allow monitoring of lubrication
> but FFT analyses will. Replace the digital readout with an FFT analyzer
and
> you're ready to run on Indy. Those data can also be transmitted via cell
> phone. Anyone wanting to replace their dash with a computer -- monitor all
> parameters. It isn't that difficult anymore. Where do you want to take
this
> thing? Money is the only limit, all else is easy. Very easy.
>
> I hope this helps to provide insight. This is pumping me up to want to do
> it. Good preventive maintenance should void or kill the project. But,
> predictive maintenance is does have cost effective virtues too. It will
> reduce maintenance while maximizing life. And, life is too short to drink
> bad wine. Besides, a motor home is throw away money for most. Unless,
> you're like me - single, travel all the time, play as much as I can.
That's
> right, I'm broke but enjoy bitching about it. I'm sitting in Big Jim now
> writing this thread. I travel every season, even winter in MI and summer
in
> FL. I will venture to say, there isn't anyone out there that spends more
> time in their MH that me. I have to depend on mine, it's a way of life. I
> hope I haven't bored anyone with my ramblings. May the good Lord take a
> liking to ya.
>
> With best regards; I'm
> Sincerely,
> Sam Pickens
> picksam
>
>
right now in Idaho.
Marlene Meineken
77Palm Beach
AKA BIG JIM
- ----- Original Message -----
From: Samuel Pickens
To:
Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 1999 1:53 PM
Subject: Re: GMC: GMC Front wheel Bearings
> Arch and all,
>
> Approaching one's vehicle. Familiarity breeds exempt. Exemption comes by
> knowing. How well do we know our vehicle? Have you recently purchased and
> assuming everything is OK? At the first Spring or Fall whichever comes
> first, pull the wheel, inspect the brakes and lubrication of the bearings,
> etc. If I have suspicion of anything, I have a tendency to attach an
> accelerometer and drive down the road gathering data for analysis before
> visual inspection. And/or from said analyses I may determine to replace
the
> bearing even before visual inspection. On the other hand said analyses may
> give me confidence to continue operation without visual inspection.
>
> Sorry about the rambling. Yes, I do analyses of bearings while driving
down
> the road. I've also performed testing on vehicles while on a rack. I did a
> Jaguar and determined the drive shaft was out of balance. They didn't
> believe me as they told me that was the drive shaft they just had
balanced.
> They were fully confident the DS was OK. I soured the problem to the DS
and
> maintained the transmission and hogs head were OK. The problem was
resolved
> when the DS was again balanced. Setting DS's up for race is interesting
but
> that's another topic. I have full confidence on those data.
>
> One bearing doesn't necessarily relate to the next. For example; the L
side
> can be OK while the R side is bad. Analysis can determine this. Now to the
> trick. Can this transfer from one person to another? NO! But, I believe
> basic guidelines could be established. A random starting point could be
> established; say at five g's 0-P overall.
>
> How to obtain that data. One approach is to instrument the vehicle with
> onboard monitoring. Another, portable monitoring device that could even be
> transported or swapped between GMCers. Breaking down on the highway can
> cost five days unless you're stinking, filthy rich. I only need to get the
> rich part right. One may instrument a vehicle for ~$1500 - I'm guessing
> (six transducers, cabling, electrical supply {either -18, -24 or -27
> volts}, and a digital readout). Once it has been determined that 5 g's is
> the flag point that alerts to inspection/replacement or whatever value
that
> is finally determined, then one could run with peace of mind. Lubrication
> can be a veribile, how much wet driving vs dry driving and do you drive
> through creeks? The overall approach won't allow monitoring of lubrication
> but FFT analyses will. Replace the digital readout with an FFT analyzer
and
> you're ready to run on Indy. Those data can also be transmitted via cell
> phone. Anyone wanting to replace their dash with a computer -- monitor all
> parameters. It isn't that difficult anymore. Where do you want to take
this
> thing? Money is the only limit, all else is easy. Very easy.
>
> I hope this helps to provide insight. This is pumping me up to want to do
> it. Good preventive maintenance should void or kill the project. But,
> predictive maintenance is does have cost effective virtues too. It will
> reduce maintenance while maximizing life. And, life is too short to drink
> bad wine. Besides, a motor home is throw away money for most. Unless,
> you're like me - single, travel all the time, play as much as I can.
That's
> right, I'm broke but enjoy bitching about it. I'm sitting in Big Jim now
> writing this thread. I travel every season, even winter in MI and summer
in
> FL. I will venture to say, there isn't anyone out there that spends more
> time in their MH that me. I have to depend on mine, it's a way of life. I
> hope I haven't bored anyone with my ramblings. May the good Lord take a
> liking to ya.
>
> With best regards; I'm
> Sincerely,
> Sam Pickens
> picksam
>
>