You would think grease in a fifth wheel would be a good thing, but apparently it's a bad thing........
After 74,000 miles of fifth wheel grease and road grime, mine decided to jam up Sunday morning. Wouldn't fully lock, and couldn't release it. Spent two days in a spare truck while the local truck shop disassembled and cleaned the fifth wheel, it now works like new. Guess I'll have to start spraying the mechanism down with diesel fuel about once a month from now on..........
Randy Vos
"Ever have one of those days where you couldn't hit the ground with your hat??" - Waylon Jennings
"May the Lord take a liking to you and blow you up, real good" - SCTV
OK Johnny, the "bullet" was disguised as a Blue/White/Green biz card that I (hint) handed you whilst you were on the phone.
BaltACDBlue 'should' come apart without undue effort. Red generally requires heat in addition to a real amount of effort. Of course blue + rust is its own animal.
I was able to get enough torque on one of the two without heat. The other wasn't gonna give up that easy.
On other topics - wind gusts as high as 44MPH here at the house today, and 51MPH at the fire station (not that far away, but I'm more lower and more protected at the house). Many tree/wires down (and continuing to be reported). By far the worst was the Amish sugar shack that collapsed, killing one of the occupants. A barn with animals in it also collapsed.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
tree68 BaltACD Blue or Red? Blue...
BaltACD Blue or Red? Blue...
Blue 'should' come apart without undue effort. Red generally requires heat in addition to a real amount of effort. Of course blue + rust is its own animal.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
BaltACDBlue or Red?
Blue...
evening
Ns had a local uptown when I left work.Csx sent some trains by while I got the oil changed in my truck.Mother nature is sure breezy.Not going to warm up anytime soon.Chores to do.
stay safe
Joe
Deshler Ohio-crossroads of the B&O Matt eats your fries.YUM! Clinton st viaduct undefeated against too tall trucks!!!(voted to be called the "Clinton St. can opener").
tree68 BaltACD Rust is natures loctite - it is much stronger than loctite. A phenomenon I am all too familiar with... There was LocTite on these bolts, however.
BaltACD Rust is natures loctite - it is much stronger than loctite.
A phenomenon I am all too familiar with...
There was LocTite on these bolts, however.
Blue or Red?
I don't know; I found no silver bullets when I got back to my room after dinner.
I went to the diner at 5:00, thinking that I would be through and back by the time we got into the station. I did not know that the steer had to be slaughtered beforeI could get my streak. The steak tasted just it should--and needed np sauce.
We arived in Chicago 29 minutes early; it would ha e been earlier if wehad not had to wait for a line into a track.
Off to washington tonight--back through Chicago a week fromthis Friday.
Johnny
BaltACDRust is natures loctite - it is much stronger than loctite.
tree68 BOB WITHORN ...so I did it myself. Mine would have been easy, but when it came time to compress the piston, it wouldn't budge - which is why the one pad was down to bare metal. A friend picked up a replacement, but it didn't look right, so he took it back, only to discover that it was the entire brake assembly, not just the cylinder. I should have known that - duh! It took heat to get the outside portion of the frame off (they apparently use LocTite on it), only to find that the bolts wouldn't thread into the new piece... But, it's all back together, and working. The other side should be OK, but I'll change them out soon, so they match.
BOB WITHORN ...so I did it myself.
Mine would have been easy, but when it came time to compress the piston, it wouldn't budge - which is why the one pad was down to bare metal. A friend picked up a replacement, but it didn't look right, so he took it back, only to discover that it was the entire brake assembly, not just the cylinder. I should have known that - duh!
It took heat to get the outside portion of the frame off (they apparently use LocTite on it), only to find that the bolts wouldn't thread into the new piece...
But, it's all back together, and working.
The other side should be OK, but I'll change them out soon, so they match.
Rust is natures loctite - it is much stronger than loctite.
Not too bad this morning. Just a little bit of ice on the sidewalk but still a lot of bare spots. Some snow fell in the north suburbs but nothing by us. Train even got into CUS a few minutes early.
5 degrees this morning. Mother nature wants to make sure we know who is in charge.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
[quote user="tree68"]
Note to self: Changing the brake pads on a nine year old truck with 180,000 miles on it is never as easy as it ought to be....
Maybe in a few days I'll try the other side...
Tree,
In 2012 it took me 7 +/- hours to replace the front rotors and breaks on my 2006 chevy 2500HD. Dealer wanted $350. to do it so I did it myself. Had to buy a 3/4" breaker bar and put a 4' pipe on the end of it. Along with the parts and a couple over tools, I spent $370.
NS is doing headers here in Georgia with big trucks. Several in past few days.
mudchicken They could put a sail on that thing and the wind could push him all the way to Lincoln. (35-60 MPH winds today) ... no tacking for sail-trains allowed.
They could put a sail on that thing and the wind could push him all the way to Lincoln. (35-60 MPH winds today) ... no tacking for sail-trains allowed.
Keeping a low profile during this yucky weather. We may wake up to snowy lawns and wet roads tomorrow. Today was another Train-spotting Tuesday at the Peck House Museum in Lombard. Thanks to the weather and kids in school, etc., we still haven't had any takers (last Tuesday, when we were on Spring Break, might have been good, but alas, it was not one of the weeks). It didn't stop the railroad from running some good trains through town: only 11 trains in three hours--it slowed considerably after the first four came through in 23 minutes!Before the Museum duty, Pat and I dined in Elmhurst, during which time a couple of eastbound manifests hit town (Pat actually predicted one using the signals as we came into town...she's getting better!). As usual, I didn't think my sightings would amount to much, but as usual, I am surprised at the good stuff I got--build dates that were needed, a series or two that were bigger than we thought, and a series of 225 2017-built covered hoppers that nobody has reported yet. We've also caught a major transfer of equipment from Wells Fargo to CAI Rail. A couple of dozen covered hoppers freshly relettered CAIX from NAHX, ACFX, and probably other reporting marks came through in a block...and looking these up has led to some intriguing back stories. And finding a series of 100 Centerbeam flat cars on the Laurinburg & Southern (surrounded by box cars in its numbering system) has led to the discovery of what may be hundreds of ex-CN cars going to a CGLX series. I hadn't known about the Centerbeams going to a CGLX group before, so this is a double-whammy to my files.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
Who was that masked man leaving silver bullets for 632-D?
JoeKohMore rain then maybe flurries tomorrow???
Deshler looked pretty nasty on the railcams. We're up for high winds tomorrow, and NWS looks pretty serious about this one.
Work not so busy today.Ns sent a westbound stack train when I left work.Took Matt to do errands in town.Csx ran an eastbound stack train.More rain then maybe flurries tomorrow???
joe
If I lose my charge early enough on Tuesday, I'll go that way.
(EDIT) properly disposed of my charge and Johnny be on-time out of Glenwood Springs (city of Falling Bridges) ... hope JD is watching the platform at Denver.
I'm sorry, I do not know why I said I would be going through Lincoln Tuesday; I am not leaving here until Tuesday morning, so I will be through Lincoln Wednesday Morning.
MC, you will have another opportunity to wave at me. If I am through with dinner (first call), I may even step off (but not go into the station).
Johnny is within 10 minutes of being on-time to Denver (in at 6:38pm and out at 7:10p), but I just got handed a new headache. (Company safety officer in town) ... May have to catch him in the morning coming back thru.
Work busy.Local was uptown.Ns sent an eastbound too when I left work.Thunderboomers tomorrow according to the guessers.
Hope everyone had a happy Easter.Back to work for me.Back to school for Matt too.
mudchicken Deggesty The temperature was in the mid-forties this morning--and reached at least 70, and is predicted to be about 40 in the morning.Rain is expected Monday Mookie, I plan to come thorugh your hometown Tuesday morning, on my way see people I knew 60+ years ago. Does that mean we wave at #6 just before dark on Monday?
Deggesty The temperature was in the mid-forties this morning--and reached at least 70, and is predicted to be about 40 in the morning.Rain is expected Monday Mookie, I plan to come thorugh your hometown Tuesday morning, on my way see people I knew 60+ years ago.
The temperature was in the mid-forties this morning--and reached at least 70, and is predicted to be about 40 in the morning.Rain is expected Monday
Mookie, I plan to come thorugh your hometown Tuesday morning, on my way see people I knew 60+ years ago.
Does that mean we wave at #6 just before dark on Monday?
Coming back, I will leave Chicago Friday, 13 April, in D in 531.
MookieMight see some snow on the ground.
No snow in my immediate area. Saw plenty of snow on my way to the railroad Friday and Saturday - and there were several inches still on the ground at Remsen, where the kids had to "hunt" eggs in the parking lot instead of on the grass.
The streams were running quite high on the lee side of Tug Hill.
A special visitor at Remsen on Saturday was Olympian Erin Hamlin, who signed autographs and posed for pictures with her medal. She actually lives there - the railroad passes not far from her family home.
Off to visit daughter's family for church and dinner.
Johnny - welcome back to Lincoln. I don't think I even know anyone I knew 60+ years ago. And I was born & raised here.
Might see some snow on the ground. Altho the weather report on Intellicast for today had "Precip 0%/.03in"
That will make you stop and think.....Not even humid yet - still very overly dry from winter....
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
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