Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
Reply |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#41
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 21:29:40 -0500, gray_wolf
wrote: On 9/28/2019 8:04 PM, Clare Snyder wrote: On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 18:39:40 -0500, gray_wolf wrote: On 9/28/2019 4:27 PM, Terry Coombs wrote: On 9/28/2019 3:34 PM, Clare Snyder wrote: On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 14:58:24 -0500, gray_wolf wrote: On 9/28/2019 9:15 AM, rangerssuck wrote: On Tuesday, September 24, 2019 at 5:45:32 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote: On 9/24/2019 9:50 AM, Terry Coombs wrote: On 9/24/2019 9:03 AM, Joseph Gwinn wrote: On Sep 24, 2019, Terry Coombs wrote (in article ): When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! It´s classic for sure. The power wire is bouncing around as you drive, and over time the wire insulation was worn through, allowing contact between copper wire and some part of the steel body.When you find the spot, it will be pretty obvious visually. Solution is to find out where this is happening, and mechanically prevent further contact. Joe Gwinn ** * I kinda figure you're right , there's a place where it's worn thru . The problem is finding that spot ... if it was obvious I'd have found it by now . I've looked and felt as much of that harness as is available to check , nothing so far . I'm starting to wonder if it's in/near the fuse block , maybe where the under-dash wiring comes from behind the block . But it's raining today , and I'll be too busy to look into it further until Friday or Saturday . *** If you know where it comes out of the fuse block. cut it at about 8", connect a new wire, run that up to the radio and do the same at the other end. Give yourself 8" out of the radio connector and connect your new wire. *** Also, I would have taken the connector loose from the radio and drove it before I got a new radio, just to verify, harness or radio. ***************************** Mikek Good plan, but... After cutting the wire a few inches out of the fuse block, I'd drive a few miles to make sure it doesn't blow the fuse. There's got to be some version of Murphy's Law that says the short will be in the wire you didn't check separately. Also, a multimeter with a continuity beeper could be a friend here. Hook it up between the supply wire and ground (fuse pulled first) and then wiggle all the wires. When it beeps, you've found your short. Is the radio the only thing that's on that fuse? I'd run a new wire with an inline fuse from the radio to the battery and see what happens. Are you sure the problem isn't in the radio? * As noted on another group the trasnmission torqueconverter lockup runs off that fuse too. Since the transmission swap was a "shade tree job" the chances of it being related to the transmission replacement are roughly 1000% - - - - - - - When the controls call for TC lockup the fuse blows. * And Clare found it , and I just a few minutes ago verified that this is (with 99.99% assurance) the problem . I'll get under there tomorrow and find where it's grounding , but I did a road test with speeds high enough to call for lockup with that wire unplugged and the fuse is still intact . The internet truly is an information highway . I would never have known that device was powered by the same fuse as the radio . There are times when having a complete wiring diagram can be a big help. :-) What's on the load side of the TC lockup output A solenoid or some such? shorted? POSSIBLY a shorted solenoid valve - but most likely a pinched wire from the transmission changeover. - possibly even just the wires crossed sothe power goes directly to ground instead of through the solenoid coil. You'd be surprised at what a shade tree mechanic is capable of screwing up. (and I've seen some real "shade tree" mechanics working in real shops too - - - - - ) Had one guy collect a paycheck from me for a couple months before I had to let him go. Saying he "worked for me" would have been stretching the truth. I'd bend over and put the knuckle of my thumb against the ground and say "that's Dave". So lazy he was always standing around with his thumb uph his arse - and so dumb he didn't know his arse from a hole inthe ground. It took longer to clear up his comebacks than the length of time he "worked for" me. I know the feeling. In a past life I was the service manager of a large company. good help was hard to find and I was well aware of some peoples limitations. Lack of education? How do you educate a brick? A brick? This guy was thick as a 12 foot 2X4 - end on. Had another one - an army brat who knew it all. Couldn't tell him anything.If I said something was white he swore it was black. Would never do what he was asked - and telling him was no more effective. I finally called him into the office and told him it was obvious he didn't like working for me, and one or the other of us was going to have to leave. He had the "balls" to say "it won't be me". I handed him 2 weeks pay and told him to back his car up to the door and load his tools. I personally went out and helped the other guys load them into his car. And "Dave" had the gall to use me as a reference for his next job - I told the prospective employer they should "consider themselves very fortunate if they could get the man to work for them" - He didn't get the job - - - |
#42
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 19:07:56 -0500
Terry Coombs wrote: snip Well , so far I have traced the brown/white wire across the steering column to where it plugs in to a device - probably a relay of some kind - mounted on the steering column . It comes out on a blue which goes thru the firewall alone then to a small bundle that heads towards the tranny . My guess is that the blue wire plugs (or is supposed to) into the lockup solenoid , and is either unhooked or damaged and grounded . I'll find out in the morning . Mines an 1982 K10 4x4 with same tranny... The wire goes to a switch on the brake pedal, out to a switch on the throttle and then to the tranny. Stepping on the brake or not enough throttle unlocks the torque converter clutch. On my truck the torque can lock in second gear if all the above conditions are met. i.e. enough throttle, no brake and going fast enough. However if you are in 4x4 it will only lock in overdrive/4th gear. I added a switch early on to make it think it was in 4x4 so it will only lockup in overdrive while in 2 wheel drive. This was in 1982, maybe they wised up and did my hack to all later on. That 700R4 is not a real solid, heavy duty tranny. Never should have been used in trucks... -- Leon Fisk Grand Rapids MI |
#43
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 9/29/2019 7:30 AM, Leon Fisk wrote:
On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 19:07:56 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: snip Well , so far I have traced the brown/white wire across the steering column to where it plugs in to a device - probably a relay of some kind - mounted on the steering column . It comes out on a blue which goes thru the firewall alone then to a small bundle that heads towards the tranny . My guess is that the blue wire plugs (or is supposed to) into the lockup solenoid , and is either unhooked or damaged and grounded . I'll find out in the morning . Mines an 1982 K10 4x4 with same tranny... The wire goes to a switch on the brake pedal, out to a switch on the throttle and then to the tranny. Stepping on the brake or not enough throttle unlocks the torque converter clutch. On my truck the torque can lock in second gear if all the above conditions are met. i.e. enough throttle, no brake and going fast enough. However if you are in 4x4 it will only lock in overdrive/4th gear. I added a switch early on to make it think it was in 4x4 so it will only lockup in overdrive while in 2 wheel drive. This was in 1982, maybe they wised up and did my hack to all later on. That 700R4 is not a real solid, heavy duty tranny. Never should have been used in trucks... Â* I'll be opening up the harness wrap in strategic locations to determine the exact path that blue wire takes . That switch on the column may very well be a switch associated with the brake . One test I thought of last night while trying to get to sleep is to disconnect the plug on the column and see if the blue wire is grounded . I've never had to deal with wiring faults that much , this has been a really frustrating experience . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#44
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 29 Sep 2019 08:27:46 -0500
Terry Coombs wrote: One test I thought of last night while trying to get to sleep is to disconnect the plug on the column and see if the blue wire is grounded . A word of caution, pretty sure the control for the torque converter lockup goes to a solenoid in the transmission. So it will show a very low ohm value that looks like a short circuit to a meter. It should draw about 0.5 amps when working. If I recall correctly the wire harness plugs in from the top on the drivers side of the transmission. Maybe 6-8 inches farther to the rear from the shifter linkage. Check that it was plugged in correctly and that cable isn't pinched somewhere going towards the engine... Big ass picture here showing the cable & connector in white: http://www.rowand.net/Shop/Tech/imag...Pictures12.jpg -- Leon Fisk Grand Rapids MI |
#45
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Leon Fisk" wrote in message
... On Sun, 29 Sep 2019 08:27:46 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: One test I thought of last night while trying to get to sleep is to disconnect the plug on the column and see if the blue wire is grounded . A word of caution, pretty sure the control for the torque converter lockup goes to a solenoid in the transmission. So it will show a very low ohm value that looks like a short circuit to a meter. It should draw about 0.5 amps when working. That would be around 24 Ohms, which should show clearly on a decent digital meter. Subtract out the reading with the probes shorted Schematic "Power Side Control #3" indicates that pin D will short to ground when the TCC Signal Switch operates. If the plug can be rotated, could pin D have been misconnected to pin B that brings power for the solenoid? The solenoid pin should show up as a low but not zero resistance to the case. |
#46
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: ** When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#47
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 13:03:21 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message --snip-- My truck sat idle for 3 years because I couldn't locate an intermittent electrical fault, despite disassembling and cleaning all the engine connectors and replacing most of the components. I finally bought the factory engine and emission manual from Ebay and used it to find the problem with an oscilloscope. I hadn't replaced the ignition module because its mounting screws were corroded in place. When it tested questionable and I did remove it one broke and I had to make a drill jig to bore out the steel screw without ruining the aluminum intake manifold's threads. Wild one, Jim. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#48
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Sep 2019 23:37:16 -0400, Clare Snyder
wrote: On Wed, 25 Sep 2019 10:03:32 -0400, Leon Fisk wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: huge snip This is an '86 GMC pickup Went and found a manual for same or similar online (64mb): http://www.73-87chevytrucks.com/tech...ice_Manual.pdf It seems that the fuse for the radio may also do a few other things: Idle Stop Solenoid, Aux. Battery, Radio, Time Delay Relay, Emission Control Solenoid, Transmission Downshift (M40) ..... 15 amp This is from page 1331 in the manual mentioned above. Maybe it will make more sense to Snag... ANd the tranny WAS just changed - I'd definitely be looking at downshift wire - - - And pay special attention to the place the wire is caught between the bell housing and engine block, right? ![]() -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#49
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: Â*Â* When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.Â* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.Â* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.Â* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Â* Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#50
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, October 7, 2019 at 9:27:11 AM UTC-4, Terry Coombs wrote:
On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: Â*Â* When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.Â* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.Â* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.Â* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Â* Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before .. -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! That business of the trans lockup and radio being powered by the same fuse sounds an awful (and I do me awful) lot like my hundred year old house wiring. It's hard to label the panel when the house wiring has been wired somewhat like a bowl of spaghetti. |
#51
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/7/2019 9:28 AM, rangerssuck wrote:
On Monday, October 7, 2019 at 9:27:11 AM UTC-4, Terry Coombs wrote: On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: Â*Â* When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.Â* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.Â* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.Â* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Â* Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! That business of the trans lockup and radio being powered by the same fuse sounds an awful (and I do me awful) lot like my hundred year old house wiring. It's hard to label the panel when the house wiring has been wired somewhat like a bowl of spaghetti. Â* I think it's more an auxiliary circuit , should have been marked "aux/radio" or somethin' . Next up is the heater fan , I might have pulled and left the fuse out while diagnosing . I hope . It was working so it's probably something simple/stupid that I've done . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#52
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Terry Coombs" wrote in message
... On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else. We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities. We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! Did you check if the misconnected plug was grounding the fused wire through the internal switch? The solenoid may not be bad. |
#53
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Terry Coombs" wrote in message
... ..... When I worked on my truck's wiring I marked each connector that I had checked and cleaned by painting a spot of white nail polish on both halves and writing the connector number from the schematic. |
#54
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/7/2019 11:15 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
"Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else. We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities. We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! Did you check if the misconnected plug was grounding the fused wire through the internal switch? The solenoid may not be bad. Â* After correcting the orientation of the plug it still blows the fuse but with it unplugged it doesn't ... so I think I've either got a burned up coil or grounded wire somewhere . I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#55
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500
Terry Coombs wrote: snip I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . The oil level on my older version is higher than the pan. So oil will start to run out soon as you crack the seal. Before I installed a drain plug I would loosen the bolts such that it would come loose at a strategic corner with a large catch pan located there. Even after some leaks out into the pan the darn thing is heavy with oil. It was always a MESS, hence adding a drain plug ![]() -- Leon Fisk Grand Rapids MI |
#56
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/7/2019 2:14 PM, Leon Fisk wrote:
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: snip I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . The oil level on my older version is higher than the pan. So oil will start to run out soon as you crack the seal. Before I installed a drain plug I would loosen the bolts such that it would come loose at a strategic corner with a large catch pan located there. Even after some leaks out into the pan the darn thing is heavy with oil. It was always a MESS, hence adding a drain plug ![]() Â* How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#57
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 18:43:07 -0500
Terry Coombs wrote: How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . First time I tried brazing on a 1/2 inch nut. Didn't like at all how it looked, turned out. So I patched over the spot with maybe a 3/16 inch by 3 inch round punch out. I MIG'd that one in place using .025 wire. Threaded a 1/4 x 24 tpi hole and used matching bolt with aluminum washer. What I had on hand at the time. That held till the pan rusted out and started leaking... The second time I used an 1/2 x 18 bolt with a 1/4 x 24 inch bolt through it to act as the drain plug. Some simple lathe work. Went in easy and hasn't leaked so far (maybe 6 years). Some images he https://postimg.cc/gallery/yyeg562q/ -- Leon Fisk Grand Rapids MI |
#58
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Terry Coombs" wrote in message
... On 10/7/2019 11:15 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote: ... Did you check if the misconnected plug was grounding the fused wire through the internal switch? The solenoid may not be bad. After correcting the orientation of the plug it still blows the fuse but with it unplugged it doesn't ... so I think I've either got a burned up coil or grounded wire somewhere . I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . -- Snag The other quick test that might save you some trouble is to see if any of the transmission pins look like a solenoid winding to a digital multimeter that reads low Ohms properly. Sometimes faults go away when you disassemble a device and you don't know how, or if, you fixed it. For comparison I measured a GE 120V 60W incandescent light bulb as 16~17 Ohms (cold). |
#59
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 11:15:34 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: On 9/24/2019 10:07 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... On 9/24/2019 9:03 AM, Joseph Gwinn wrote: On Sep 24, 2019, Terry Coombs wrote (in article ): When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! It´s classic for sure. The power wire is bouncing around as you drive, and over time the wire insulation was worn through, allowing contact between copper wire and some part of the steel body.When you find the spot, it will be pretty obvious visually. Solution is to find out where this is happening, and mechanically prevent further contact. Joe Gwinn I kinda figure you're right , there's a place where it's worn thru . The problem is finding that spot ... if it was obvious I'd have found it by now . I've looked and felt as much of that harness as is available to check , nothing so far . I'm starting to wonder if it's in/near the fuse block , maybe where the under-dash wiring comes from behind the block . But it's raining today , and I'll be too busy to look into it further until Friday or Saturday . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! Taping possible contact areas may help. This has been useful when there are no voltage-sensitive components at risk, like older appliances: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00975X2FY..._26725410_item Battery-powered ones are more convenient, but don't stop generating if you get shocked. * And at a thousand volts ... someone else on another ng posted a link to wiring diagrams , which led my eventually to a forum post that indicates that power lead goes straight and only to the radio . It comes out of the harness with the correct other wires . I have traced that harness from the fuse block to the radio and find no damage or rubs or torn wrap . My next step will be to pull the fuse block from the firewall and check for problems on the back side . Gotta pull the plug off from the rngine side first , and that ain't happenin' in the rain . Just pull a new wire from the fuse block and be done with it. Gunner __ "Poor widdle Wudy...mentally ill, lies constantly, doesnt know who he is, or even what gender "he" is. No more pathetic creature has ever walked the earth. But...he is locked into a mental hospital for the safety of the public. Which is a very good thing." Asun rauhassa, valmistaudun sotaan. -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#60
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Sep 2019 23:29:41 -0400, Gerry
wrote: On Wed, 25 Sep 2019 07:34:49 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... ... I'm thinking that Steve is right , it's inside the harness . I spent over an hour today minutely inspecting that harness for any kind of damage that might be the short . I'm tied up tomorrow and Thursday , but on Friday I'll be pulling that fuse block and probably running a new power supply wire outside the harness . As far as what conditions cause the short , that's what is weird . I have over a mile of rough (ROUGH!) unpaved road to get to the highway , the radio died a couple of miles after I hit the paved road . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! You might research how to make a reliable splice in vehicle wiring, since vibrating copper wire tends to work-harden and break. When engine electronics expanded in the 1970's even the engineers had trouble with connections. When I was wiring prototype electric vehicles the company had the proper expensive crimping tools. Soldering is usually bad because it can create a stress concentration where the wires exit the solder, which hastens breakage. The motor in my Maytag washing machine failed that way. I don't have a 100% perfect record of crimp-splicing wires at home with cheap consumer or worn industrial tooling and like welding it's a muscle-memory type job I'm better at doing than describing. About the worst I ever ran across was a 1983 Dodge Aries where the wiring harness for door locks and power windows complete with cloth tape protected, spot welded branch connections, was routed under the floor mat insulation/padding under the drivers feet. Were else in the car could you find a greater quantity of chemical laden water during cold weather in the Great White North! I have an even better one... 2003 Dodge Caravan. All the wiring from the dash..controls, etc etc..runs out of the back of the dash..under the PLASTIC driverside wheel well cover and then into the engine compartment. When you blow a steel belted and it wipes out the inner plastic cover..and then rips out all the wiring from both the engine compartment AND the dash..it gets pretty ****ty... https://photos.app.goo.gl/ikd6KP2UeN61g3pA3 The wife still drives with an LED flashlight on the dash at night to show the speedo. I need to fix that.. I keep forgetting and she never reminds me. I had to get an entire wiring harness from another Dodge and rip out the old one and install the new one. And of course..there was no "plug and play" I installed that black split plastic wire conduit..a coupld of 1" diameter runs over the wires before putting it all back together again. Got everything working..except for the dash lights...shrug. Gunner __ "Poor widdle Wudy...mentally ill, lies constantly, doesnt know who he is, or even what gender "he" is. No more pathetic creature has ever walked the earth. But...he is locked into a mental hospital for the safety of the public. Which is a very good thing." Asun rauhassa, valmistaudun sotaan. -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#61
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 18:43:07 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: On 10/7/2019 2:14 PM, Leon Fisk wrote: On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: snip I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . The oil level on my older version is higher than the pan. So oil will start to run out soon as you crack the seal. Before I installed a drain plug I would loosen the bolts such that it would come loose at a strategic corner with a large catch pan located there. Even after some leaks out into the pan the darn thing is heavy with oil. It was always a MESS, hence adding a drain plug ![]() * How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . I've brazed them several times without a warlage issue. How's the lockup problem coming? Just got back from 3 week holiday. |
#62
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 12:42:32 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... ..... When I worked on my truck's wiring I marked each connector that I had checked and cleaned by painting a spot of white nail polish on both halves and writing the connector number from the schematic. Smart man, labeling things. Digital pics of before (assembled) and after (torn apart) are good, too. I recently picked up a new Dymo labelmaker. Wow, what a difference from the old plastic letters to the new electronic labels. Man was it worth the price! LabelManager 280, $34 at Amazon,plus $10.68 for 4 extra rolls of labels. If you have more to do, get one of these things. The cheap Chiwanese labels work fine with them, too. I'm decluttering the entire house and shop, putting the things I keep in clear plastic boxes with labels, and ordering them better than I ever had before. It's starting to look sane around here as a result, and I can find stuff and tools again. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#63
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 08:27:49 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: ** When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt * Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . Yeah, I saw that later that day, as I caught up. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#64
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: On 10/7/2019 11:15 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... On 10/5/2019 6:12 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 07:58:47 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: When I got my truck back from our son , lots of things that he just couldn't be bothered to fix . One thing is the radio power supply . He did tell me that the radio had "died" , turns out the fuse (in the fuse block) keeps blowing . I've got the dashboard apart enough to check the wiring harness and supply wires , can't find any cuts or anything that looks like damaged insulation ... it works just fine sittin' in the driveway , but within a few miles driving it blows the fuse . I figured it was the radio/CD player unit so I got a new one , does the same thing . I'm really puzzled by this , from the way the fuse was spattered it's got to be a dead short to ground . I think it very unlikely that the new radio/CD unit is bad - the old one did work when I replaced the fuse , for a few miles same as the new unit . This is an '86 GMC pickup , I'm hoping someone here might be aware of a known problem area that I might check ... I gotta have tunes ! Check for any extra connections between the battery and radio. It could be a loose connection. You'll find your extra amperage going to warm that connection. Alt1: Run a separate fuse to a switched hot. Alt2: earphones and your phone/MP3 player are a cheap and easy pair. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else. We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities. We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt Catch up Larry , we've tracked it down to the converter lockup solenoid/wiring inside the trans . Got the new solenoid right here , just need a couple of days to get it installed ... figure it would be good to go ahead with the axle gear swap and installing the correct drive gears in the trans . That means I need about 3-5 days that I can do without the truck since I'm getting into stuff I've never done before . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! Did you check if the misconnected plug was grounding the fused wire through the internal switch? The solenoid may not be bad. * After correcting the orientation of the plug it still blows the fuse but with it unplugged it doesn't ... so I think I've either got a burned up coil or grounded wire somewhere . I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . Doublecheck that your shadetree didn't swap wires in the connector, JIC. Have fun! -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#65
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 8 Oct 2019 08:53:39 -0400, Leon Fisk
wrote: On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 18:43:07 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . First time I tried brazing on a 1/2 inch nut. Didn't like at all how it looked, turned out. So I patched over the spot with maybe a 3/16 inch by 3 inch round punch out. I MIG'd that one in place using .025 wire. Threaded a 1/4 x 24 tpi hole and used matching bolt with aluminum washer. What I had on hand at the time. That held till the pan rusted out and started leaking... The second time I used an 1/2 x 18 bolt with a 1/4 x 24 inch bolt through it to act as the drain plug. Some simple lathe work. Went in easy and hasn't leaked so far (maybe 6 years). Some images he https://postimg.cc/gallery/yyeg562q/ Nice, and no warpage from welding. -- There is s no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American.* The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.* We are a nation, not a hodge-podge of foreign nationalities.* We are a people, and not a polyglot boarding house. --Theodore Roosevelt |
#66
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 12:42:32 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Terry Coombs" wrote in message ... ..... When I worked on my truck's wiring I marked each connector that I had checked and cleaned by painting a spot of white nail polish on both halves and writing the connector number from the schematic. Smart man, labeling things. Digital pics of before (assembled) and after (torn apart) are good, too. I recently picked up a new Dymo labelmaker. Wow, what a difference from the old plastic letters to the new electronic labels. Man was it worth the price! LabelManager 280, $34 at Amazon,plus $10.68 for 4 extra rolls of labels. If you have more to do, get one of these things. The cheap Chiwanese labels work fine with them, too. I'm decluttering the entire house and shop, putting the things I keep in clear plastic boxes with labels, and ordering them better than I ever had before. It's starting to look sane around here as a result, and I can find stuff and tools again. I labelled wiring harnesses with white printed heatshrink when [big auto company] was paying for the supplies. At home I've had better luck with white nail polish and a fine point Sharpie than any stick-on labels on connectors that don't have smooth flat surfaces and get hot. The factory manuals for my vehicles have good drawings showing connector locations, and others that gave the individual connectors' wire color coding. I only had to match the connectors to the drawings and label them, which I did as I cleaned them to mark my progress. The pins are retained by red tabs that can be removed with needle nose pliers to extract individual pins. |
#67
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/19/2019 11:52 AM, Clare Snyder wrote:
On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 18:43:07 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: On 10/7/2019 2:14 PM, Leon Fisk wrote: On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: snip I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . The oil level on my older version is higher than the pan. So oil will start to run out soon as you crack the seal. Before I installed a drain plug I would loosen the bolts such that it would come loose at a strategic corner with a large catch pan located there. Even after some leaks out into the pan the darn thing is heavy with oil. It was always a MESS, hence adding a drain plug ![]() Â* How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . I've brazed them several times without a warlage issue. How's the lockup problem coming? Just got back from 3 week holiday. Â* I'm pretty much just ignoring it for right now . I have other stuff to do to the truck , plan on all in one shot . Tomorrow will be (I hope) the last day I'll "need" the truck for a little while , may start on it later this week . I am sourcing the few other parts I'll need (speedo drive mainly) so when I start I'll keep at it until I'm finished . -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
#68
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 21 Oct 2019 21:39:20 -0500, Terry Coombs
wrote: On 10/19/2019 11:52 AM, Clare Snyder wrote: On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 18:43:07 -0500, Terry Coombs wrote: On 10/7/2019 2:14 PM, Leon Fisk wrote: On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 13:51:53 -0500 Terry Coombs wrote: snip I need to change the oil and filter anyway , so I'll be able to check it all while I've got it open . The oil level on my older version is higher than the pan. So oil will start to run out soon as you crack the seal. Before I installed a drain plug I would loosen the bolts such that it would come loose at a strategic corner with a large catch pan located there. Even after some leaks out into the pan the darn thing is heavy with oil. It was always a MESS, hence adding a drain plug ![]() * How did you install that drain plug ? I was thinking about TIG welding a bung in , but am concerned that it'll warp . I've brazed them several times without a warlage issue. How's the lockup problem coming? Just got back from 3 week holiday. * I'm pretty much just ignoring it for right now . I have other stuff to do to the truck , plan on all in one shot . Tomorrow will be (I hope) the last day I'll "need" the truck for a little while , may start on it later this week . I am sourcing the few other parts I'll need (speedo drive mainly) so when I start I'll keep at it until I'm finished . Sounds like a plan -- |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Using a metal gasifier to run a metal generator using chips made of wood, not metal | Metalworking | |||
Adding new Circuits to Room Addition... 2 wires or 2 wires + Ground? | Home Repair | |||
WTB Used Metal Shrinker for sheet metal work. | Metalworking | |||
Grounding Of Ground Wires In An Electrical Gang Box (how to handle the green ground wires) | Home Repair | |||
Metal working tools for sheet metal... slightly different take than usual | Metalworking |