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  #1  
Old 01-11-17, 21:38
Kevin Goodwin Kevin Goodwin is offline
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Lang,
The engine number is T110L 494350
Kevin
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  #2  
Old 01-11-17, 22:26
Lang Lang is offline
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Kevin

You have a truck with the original T110 motor.

3 7/16 bore and 4 1/4 stroke = 236.6 cu inch giving around 115hp.

This is around 15hp more than the Weapon Carrier T214/T215 230 cu inch short block motor.

Lang
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  #3  
Old 05-11-17, 18:54
Kevin Goodwin Kevin Goodwin is offline
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Hi all,
Bit of an update on progress, the engine has been stripped and will require a full rebuild, unfortunately the old girl has received no basic maintenance, the crank will require a regrind, the bores will need a rebore plus new camshaft bearings will need to be fitted, hopefully we will be able to source the required parts. I dont think the engine has seen antifreeze judging by the amount of rusty crud we have removed so far. The water distribution tube had all but dissolved, thankfully we managed to remove the rusty material with some prodding and poking with various implements, combined with me turning the engine on its end lifting it up and down banging the block onto a lump of wood to dislodge the offending crud, as can be seen in the pictures. Thanks to Jerry for his assistance this morning and to Howard for allowing us to disturb his Sunday morning. I am considering giving the engine block the 'Mollases' treatment to help remove the remaining rust, have any of you tried this method?
The chassis is now coated in a gloss sand ready for 'flattening' before the final matt finish is applied. the chassis needs extending by approx 25" to replace the sections cut off for the tipping conversion (thanks Tom for measuring your truck). The last picture shows a rear pintle hook layout, does anyone know where I may be able to source these items? I can 'get away' with just the two brackets which the spring fits into, I can get a spring manufactured to suit.
I am now in the process of stripping down the rear springs ready to be cleaned and painted, it has been suggested that I grease the leaves to improve the ride being as I wont be carrying any great weight around, I would then cover them with Denso tape to keep the elements out (mainly grit) your views on that method?
I have ordered the material from our local forge to make the replacement cupola for the roof, I will post some pictures of that as it progresses.

Kevin
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Engine strip down 2 showing rust from water tube.jpg (170.2 KB, 3 views)
File Type: jpg Water Tube Crud From Removal.jpg (174.8 KB, 3 views)
File Type: jpg Dodge Chassis 2.jpg (107.3 KB, 3 views)
File Type: jpg Rear pintle hook layout 3.JPG (338.8 KB, 5 views)
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  #4  
Old 05-11-17, 21:57
Lang Lang is offline
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Kevin

I once drove one of those Dodges on a 300km each way trip. One way loaded and one way empty.

The ride loaded was of course very smooth but the empty ride was also quite good. I personally would not be creating a mess and bandaging springs as I doubt the improvement, if any, in the ride would be worth the effort.

Any empty truck will jolt over a deep pothole due to the sheer strength of the springs not sufficiently bending, no amount of greasing is going to alter this. Most trucks partially overcome this hard empty ride with a secondary helper spring which does not come into play until the load pushes the truck down to engage the helpers on their support brackets.

A bit of research will find evidence that greased springs are detrimental to ride as they rely in friction between the leaves to smooth out the bounce, particularly on the rebound. That is one reason coil springs are unworkable without shock absorbers while leaves still give a reasonable ride.

I would talk to somebody who has actually greased their springs to make sure it is worth the effort.

Lang
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  #5  
Old 06-11-17, 03:40
motto motto is offline
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I once bought a WC51 that had been restored by a hot rod builder and he had used strips of teflon sheet between all the spring leaves to give a softer ride. The outcome was not what he imagined, haemorrhaged shockers leading to violent bucking on a railway level crossing that nearly threw me off the road on my way home from purchasing the vehicle. I promptly dismantled the springs to remove the teflon and found that one of the centre bolts had sheared off and another was on the way. No doubt due to the teflon.
As regards greasing leaf springs I recall reading a warning in one of the TMs that stated it was not to be done as it would lead to, 'Too lively a spring action', which is exactly what I had with the teflon in the WC51
The mystery to me is that the Dodge ambulances were fitted with greased springs wrapped in sheet metal and they were not the only vehicles to have this feature. Maybe the little difference between laden and unladen weights meant the springs could be more precisely matched to the task.
In the final analysis I would recommend you do what the TM says and nothing more.

David
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Last edited by motto; 06-11-17 at 03:45.
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  #6  
Old 06-11-17, 04:39
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Mike K Mike K is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by motto View Post
I once bought a WC51 that had been restored by a hot rod builder
David
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  #7  
Old 22-11-17, 19:26
Kevin Goodwin Kevin Goodwin is offline
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Bit of an update, I have sourced another engine from the states, it has the 25" block, engine number T118 117041. The truck resto has stalled at the moment whilst we await certain parts, probably won't have much progress now until the new year.
Lang the link you posted regarding these engines does not show the power output for this engine, do you know what it should be?
Kevin
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