=?iso-8859-1?Q?Re:_[GMCnet]_The_don=E2=80=99t-drive-it-enough_blues.?=

ken & dennis 2013

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Dec 8, 2007
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Hurry & get here before you break something else!

Ken H

On Wed, Oct 2, 2019, 7:52 AM Richard Denney via Gmclist <

> So, after all my extended project replacing the rear...everything, I took
> it for a spin today before driving to Mansfield tomorrow. Everything worked
> fine. It stops pretty darn well, though I still can’t lock the brakes.
>
> I installed a vacuum pump similar to the one JimK sells to replace my leaky
> JC4 and as long as it has power, I can’t run out of boost. It sucks from a
> one-gallon vacuum reserve tank. But it ran and ran on Saturday when I
> installed it, until I found that check valve in that tank not fully seated
> and leaking. Maybe that JC4 pump wasn’t so leaky after all.
>
> But here’s what happened today:
>
> Macerator wouldn’t run. Turned the shaft with a screwdriver—that didn’t
> help at first. Fried the fuse in the attempt. Finally got it to run, but it
> does not start on every throw of the switch. I can live with that, or deal
> with it in Mansfield.
>
> Fantastic Fan would open but the fan wouldn’t blow. After much fiddling,
> figured out it was the remote out of synch with the fan, and it was
> thinking I had set the fan to a higher temperature than we had, and would
> spin up the motor. Got that working.
>
> Water tank wouldn’t drain. Bugs had built a mud nest in the drain pipe. Got
> that fixed.
>
> One of my two propane tanks has a leaky attachment. I used two 20-pound
> portable tanks, so I switched to the other one. Fine for now.
>
> Power Level air pump would turn on. Huh? That’s been working hard for the
> last few weeks. Checked the fuse, which is an inline fuse to the main power
> feed to a load-reduction relay. The fuse was actively burning up. Turned my
> main kill switch off to stop the current. Cut that melted and fried fuse
> holder out and replace it. Works fine now.
>
> But the goofiest one came at the end of my test drive. About a mile from
> home, on my bumpy dirt road, I suddenly heard a metallic dragging sound.
> Stopped and circled the coach looking for some rear-suspension reaction rod
> or brake part I had installed dragging on the ground. Nope. Then I saw
> it—my lovely stainless steel air tank was dragging and held only by the two
> air lines. The bracket was bolted to the bottom of the battery tray, and
> the bolts had come loose and fallen out. I had to cut off the threaded rod
> used on the bottom of the clamp because of rust, and then reassemble and
> re-attach the bracket. That took an hour to fix.
>
> Just a normal prep day for a trip. Sheesh.
>
> Good news, though. No evidence of mice since I bought all the stainless
> steel scrubbies in a five-state area and stuffed them into every possible
> entrance point. We vacuumed up a thousand or two stink-bug carcasses, but
> that’s normal.
>
> Rick “hoping it makes KenB feel a little better” Denney
> --
> '73 X-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
> Northern Virginia
> Offlist email: rick at rickdenney dot com
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>
 
Too late. I think my fan clutch is dying. :) It was HOT today.

(We are two hours out as of a quarter to 8—just stopped for a quick bite
after turning onto 77 from 70.)

Rick “sorta like a slipping belt sound, but only when the clutch is trying
to engage” Denney

On Wed, Oct 2, 2019 at 3:04 PM Ken Henderson via Gmclist <

> Hurry & get here before you break something else!
>
> Ken H
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 2, 2019, 7:52 AM Richard Denney via Gmclist <

>
> > So, after all my extended project replacing the rear...everything, I took
> > it for a spin today before driving to Mansfield tomorrow. Everything
> worked
> > fine. It stops pretty darn well, though I still can’t lock the brakes.
> >
> > I installed a vacuum pump similar to the one JimK sells to replace my
> leaky
> > JC4 and as long as it has power, I can’t run out of boost. It sucks from
> a
> > one-gallon vacuum reserve tank. But it ran and ran on Saturday when I
> > installed it, until I found that check valve in that tank not fully
> seated
> > and leaking. Maybe that JC4 pump wasn’t so leaky after all.
> >
> > But here’s what happened today:
> >
> > Macerator wouldn’t run. Turned the shaft with a screwdriver—that didn’t
> > help at first. Fried the fuse in the attempt. Finally got it to run, but
> it
> > does not start on every throw of the switch. I can live with that, or
> deal
> > with it in Mansfield.
> >
> > Fantastic Fan would open but the fan wouldn’t blow. After much fiddling,
> > figured out it was the remote out of synch with the fan, and it was
> > thinking I had set the fan to a higher temperature than we had, and would
> > spin up the motor. Got that working.
> >
> > Water tank wouldn’t drain. Bugs had built a mud nest in the drain pipe.
> Got
> > that fixed.
> >
> > One of my two propane tanks has a leaky attachment. I used two 20-pound
> > portable tanks, so I switched to the other one. Fine for now.
> >
> > Power Level air pump would turn on. Huh? That’s been working hard for the
> > last few weeks. Checked the fuse, which is an inline fuse to the main
> power
> > feed to a load-reduction relay. The fuse was actively burning up. Turned
> my
> > main kill switch off to stop the current. Cut that melted and fried fuse
> > holder out and replace it. Works fine now.
> >
> > But the goofiest one came at the end of my test drive. About a mile from
> > home, on my bumpy dirt road, I suddenly heard a metallic dragging sound.
> > Stopped and circled the coach looking for some rear-suspension reaction
> rod
> > or brake part I had installed dragging on the ground. Nope. Then I saw
> > it—my lovely stainless steel air tank was dragging and held only by the
> two
> > air lines. The bracket was bolted to the bottom of the battery tray, and
> > the bolts had come loose and fallen out. I had to cut off the threaded
> rod
> > used on the bottom of the clamp because of rust, and then reassemble and
> > re-attach the bracket. That took an hour to fix.
> >
> > Just a normal prep day for a trip. Sheesh.
> >
> > Good news, though. No evidence of mice since I bought all the stainless
> > steel scrubbies in a five-state area and stuffed them into every possible
> > entrance point. We vacuumed up a thousand or two stink-bug carcasses, but
> > that’s normal.
> >
> > Rick “hoping it makes KenB feel a little better” Denney
> > --
> > '73 X-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
> > Northern Virginia
> > Offlist email: rick at rickdenney dot com
> > _______________________________________________
> > GMCnet mailing list
> > Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> > http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
> >
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>
--
'73 X-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
Northern Virginia
Offlist email: rick at rickdenney dot com