Waking a sleeping giant

rob teed

New member
Jun 1, 1999
164
0
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I would put some gas additive in the tank..My gas was so
dark the mechanic said he had never seen anything like it.. this after I
drained off 35gals of old gas ( maybe ten
years old! )
Yours shouldn't be so bad.
Rob Teed 74 Painted Desert

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-gmcmotorhome
> [mailto:owner-gmcmotorhome]On Behalf Of Wayne Newland
> Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2000 12:06 PM
> To: gmcmotorhome
> Subject: Re: GMC: Waking a sleeping giant
>
>
> Eric
> Take the buyers check list found on gene's page.
>
> The battery will probably be down enough not to fire the engine,
> so take a battery
> charger and an ext cord. Be patient. While the battery is being
> charged up,
> Pull the plugs,one at a time, squirt a couple of squirts of
> Wynn's Supreme into the
> plug holes to lub the cylinders. Let it sit while the battery is
> charging.
>
> If thge coach is where freezing weather could affect it,
> Then check the plumbing. Look under the bathrooom sink for the
> hot water tank,
> with a flashlight.
> you are checking for signs of freeze-up (cracks & bulges in the
> tank, water
> lines). Turn on the water pump and open one of the faucets, see
> what happens (if
> the water pump doesn't come on, it may only mean that the house
> battery may be
> low). As you walk to the rear, the water tank is probably under the left
> (passenger side) couch. Pull out the face and look around there.
> See if there is
> any water in the tank. The water pump is also there.
>
> Pull the oil dip stick and check for indications of water in the
> oil, or a very
> high oil reading on the stick (again, water in the oil). Very
> low (way over a
> quart) add a quart. Up to a quart down, don't worry about it -
> the dip stick may
> not be properly caliberated.
>
> When the battery is up, turn the engine over easy, don't worry
> about it firing. If
> that works, then pump the gas pedal to prime the carb. When the
> engine fires,
> don't race it, let it work easy for a while. Oil can be changed later.
>
> When the engine starts, you will hear a roar from the fanclutch
> and a noise from
> the air compresser. Time how long the air compresser runs until
> it quits (the air
> bags should be up). 3 - 5 minutes, from empty seems to be
> average. Set the valves
> to travel. Then you can think about taking it for a ride. If
> the compresser
> cycles, that's ok at first. If it doesn't, that's even better.
>
> Wayne Newland F9300 75 Palm Beach Columbia, Md
>

>
>
> > Hello All,
> >
> > I am going to look at a 73 260 this weekend. It has been
> sitting in outside
> > storage for close to a year now. It was not
> > prepared but due to circumstances was parked and left just like
> if you pulled
> > into your driveway expecting to use your vehicle
> > tomorrow but tomorrow never came. Any special precautions
> before trying to
> > start this GMC? Draining the old gas won't be practical, nor
> changing the oil,
> > coolant, etc... How bad will it be to try and start? Prior t
> being parkd it
> > sounds like it was very well maintained. Thanks
> >
> > eric.henning
> > GMC wannabee
>
>

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Hello All,

I am going to look at a 73 260 this weekend. It has been sitting in outside
storage for close to a year now. It was not
prepared but due to circumstances was parked and left just like if you pulled
into your driveway expecting to use your vehicle
tomorrow but tomorrow never came. Any special precautions before trying to
start this GMC? Draining the old gas won't be practical, nor changing the oil,
coolant, etc... How bad will it be to try and start? Prior t being parkd it
sounds like it was very well maintained. Thanks

eric.henning
GMC wannabee
 
Eric
Take the buyers check list found on gene's page.

The battery will probably be down enough not to fire the engine, so take a battery
charger and an ext cord. Be patient. While the battery is being charged up,
Pull the plugs,one at a time, squirt a couple of squirts of Wynn's Supreme into the
plug holes to lub the cylinders. Let it sit while the battery is charging.

If thge coach is where freezing weather could affect it,
Then check the plumbing. Look under the bathrooom sink for the hot water tank,
with a flashlight.
you are checking for signs of freeze-up (cracks & bulges in the tank, water
lines). Turn on the water pump and open one of the faucets, see what happens (if
the water pump doesn't come on, it may only mean that the house battery may be
low). As you walk to the rear, the water tank is probably under the left
(passenger side) couch. Pull out the face and look around there. See if there is
any water in the tank. The water pump is also there.

Pull the oil dip stick and check for indications of water in the oil, or a very
high oil reading on the stick (again, water in the oil). Very low (way over a
quart) add a quart. Up to a quart down, don't worry about it - the dip stick may
not be properly caliberated.

When the battery is up, turn the engine over easy, don't worry about it firing. If
that works, then pump the gas pedal to prime the carb. When the engine fires,
don't race it, let it work easy for a while. Oil can be changed later.

When the engine starts, you will hear a roar from the fanclutch and a noise from
the air compresser. Time how long the air compresser runs until it quits (the air
bags should be up). 3 - 5 minutes, from empty seems to be average. Set the valves
to travel. Then you can think about taking it for a ride. If the compresser
cycles, that's ok at first. If it doesn't, that's even better.

Wayne Newland F9300 75 Palm Beach Columbia, Md

> Hello All,
>
> I am going to look at a 73 260 this weekend. It has been sitting in outside
> storage for close to a year now. It was not
> prepared but due to circumstances was parked and left just like if you pulled
> into your driveway expecting to use your vehicle
> tomorrow but tomorrow never came. Any special precautions before trying to
> start this GMC? Draining the old gas won't be practical, nor changing the oil,
> coolant, etc... How bad will it be to try and start? Prior t being parkd it
> sounds like it was very well maintained. Thanks
>
> eric.henning
> GMC wannabee
 
This was a fun post and necessary..... I put it up on the web page (look
under new).

Since there have been several "Wakings" lately, I thought others might have
something to add.

gene

>Eric
>Take the buyers check list found on gene's page.
>
>The battery will probably be down enough not to fire the engine, so take a
battery
>charger and an ext cord. Be patient. While the battery is being charged up,
>Pull the plugs,one at a time, squirt a couple of squirts of Wynn's Supreme
into the
>plug holes to lub the cylinders. Let it sit while the battery is charging.
>
>If thge coach is where freezing weather could affect it,
>Then check the plumbing. Look under the bathrooom sink for the hot water
tank,
>with a flashlight.
>you are checking for signs of freeze-up (cracks & bulges in the tank, water
>lines). Turn on the water pump and open one of the faucets, see what
happens (if
>the water pump doesn't come on, it may only mean that the house battery
may be
>low). As you walk to the rear, the water tank is probably under the left
>(passenger side) couch. Pull out the face and look around there. See if
there is
>any water in the tank. The water pump is also there.
>
>Pull the oil dip stick and check for indications of water in the oil, or a
very
>high oil reading on the stick (again, water in the oil). Very low (way
over a
>quart) add a quart. Up to a quart down, don't worry about it - the dip
stick may
>not be properly caliberated.
>
>When the battery is up, turn the engine over easy, don't worry about it
firing. If
>that works, then pump the gas pedal to prime the carb. When the engine
fires,
>don't race it, let it work easy for a while. Oil can be changed later.
>
>When the engine starts, you will hear a roar from the fanclutch and a
noise from
>the air compresser. Time how long the air compresser runs until it quits
(the air
>bags should be up). 3 - 5 minutes, from empty seems to be average. Set
the valves
>to travel. Then you can think about taking it for a ride. If the compresser
>cycles, that's ok at first. If it doesn't, that's even better.
>
>Wayne Newland F9300 75 Palm Beach Columbia, Md
>

>
>
>> Hello All,
>>
>> I am going to look at a 73 260 this weekend. It has been sitting in
outside
>> storage for close to a year now. It was not
>> prepared but due to circumstances was parked and left just like if you
pulled
>> into your driveway expecting to use your vehicle
>> tomorrow but tomorrow never came. Any special precautions before trying to
>> start this GMC? Draining the old gas won't be practical, nor changing
the oil,
>> coolant, etc... How bad will it be to try and start? Prior t being
parkd it
>> sounds like it was very well maintained. Thanks
>>
>> eric.henning
>> GMC wannabee
>
>
Genef -- 77PB/ore/ca
GMC MOTORHOME INFORMATION
mr.erf
http://www.california.com/~eagle/